glutathione transferases: probing for isoform specificity
TRANSCRIPT
Glutathione Transferases:
Probing for isoform specificity using
Dynamic Combinatorial Chemistry
A thesis presented for the degree of
PhD in Biological Chemistry
by
Anne M. Caniard
University of Edinburgh
2010
2
Declaration
I herewith declare that all of the work and experiments in this thesis are
my own unless otherwise noted. None of this work has been submitted in
any other application for a higher degree.
Anne M. Caniard
3
Table of Contents
Declaration 2
Table of Contents 3
Abbreviations 10
Acknowledgements 13
Abstract 14
Chapter 1. Probing the active site of four eukaryotic glutathione
transferases using dynamic combinatorial chemistry 16
1.1 Introduction 17
1.1.1. Introduction to glutathione transferases 17
1.1.1.1. Role in cellular detoxication 17
1.1.1.2. The mercapturic acid pathway 18
1.1.1.3. Glutathione: an unusual peptide 20
1.1.1.3.1. The structure of glutathione 20
1.1.1.3.2. Glutathione metabolism 21
1.1.1.3.3. Glutathione functions 23
1.1.1.3.3.1. Antioxidant functions 23
1.1.1.3.3.2. Detoxifying functions 24
1.1.1.3.3.3. Maintenance of the intracellular redox state and cell signalling
24
1.1.1.4. The glutathione transferase super-family 27
4
1.1.1.4.1. Cytosolic glutathione transferases 27
1.1.1.4.1.1. Protein architecture 28
1.1.1.4.1.2. G-, H-, and L-sites 30
1.1.1.4.2. Glutathione transferases as therapeutic targets 34
1.1.1.4.2.1. Mammalian cytosolic glutathione transferases and cancer 34
1.1.1.4.2.1.1. Mammalian cytosolic glutathione transferases 35
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.1. Alpha, mu and pi classes 35
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.2. Theta-class 37
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.3. Omega-class 37
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.4. Sigma-class 38
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.5. Zeta-class 38
1.1.1.4.2.1.2. Drug detoxification 42
1.1.1.4.2.2. SjGST as a drug target in schistosomiasis treatment 42
1.1.1.4.2.2.1. Schistosomiasis 42
1.1.1.4.2.2.2. The 26 kDa glutathione fransferase from Schistosoma japonicum
43
1.1.1.4.2.3. Glutathione transferase inhibitors and pro-drugs 45
1.1.1.4.2.3.1. Inhibitors 45
1.1.1.4.2.3.1.1. GS-R conjugates 46
1.1.1.4.2.3.1.2. Bivalent inhibitors 47
1.1.1.4.2.3.2. Glutathione transferase – activated pro-drugs 48
1.1.2. Dynamic combinatorial chemistry as an exploring tool in isoform specificity
49
1.1.2.1. Protein-directed dynamic combinatorial chemistry 50
5
1.1.2.1.1. Imine bond formation 51
1.1.2.1.2. Disulfide bond exchange 54
1.1.2.1.3. Enzymatic methods 55
1.1.2.2. Dynamic combinatorial chemistry and SjGST 56
1.1.3. Aims and research strategy 59
1.2. Results and Discussion 60
1.2.1. Structural comparison of the four glutathione transferase isoforms 60
1.2.2. Glutathione transferase purification and characterization 65
1.2.2.1. Expression and purification 65
1.2.2.2. Enzymatic analyses 77
1.2.3. Exploring glutathione transferase active sites 83
1.2.3.1. Glutathione transferase – templated dynamic combinatorial chemistry
82
1.2.3.2. Biological assays 88
1.2.3.2.1. Binding studies 89
1.2.3.2.2. Inhibition studies 92
1.2.3.3. Structural insights into the dynamic combinatorial library amplification
mechanism 95
1.2.3.3.1. Docking studies 95
1.2.3.3.2. Importance of the heteroatom in SjGST selection of a
five-membered heterocycle 99
1.2.3.3.2.1. Generation of a 3-member dynamic combinatorial library 99
1.2.3.3.2.2. NMR studies 100
1.3. Conclusions 103
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1.4. Chapter 1 references 104
Chapter 2: Probing the active site of a bacterial glutathione transferase
using dynamic combinatorial chemistry 114
2.1. Introduction 115
2.1.1. Bacterial GSTs 115
2.1.2. The beta-class GST BphK 115
2.1.3. Aims and research strategy 118
2.2. Results and discussion 119
2.2.1. BphK_J2315 isolation and purification 119
2.2.2. Exploration of BphK_J2315’s active site using dynamic combinatorial
chemistry 125
2.3. Conclusions 128
2.4. Chapter 2 references 129
Chapter 3: Preliminary work on the exploration of a glutathione
transferase-homolog using dynamic combinatorial chemistry 131
3.1. Introduction 132
3.1.1. Eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1Bγ (eEF1Bγ) from Saccharomyces
cerevisae 132
3.1.2. Aims and research strategy 135
3.2. Results and discussion 136
3.2.1. Expression and purification 136
3.2.2. Probing domain 1’ using dynamic combinatorial chemistry 140
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3.3. Conclusions 143
3.4. Chapter 3 references 144
Chapter 4: Biotechnological applications of glutathione transferases with
quantum dots 146
4.1. Introduction 147
4.1.1. Quantum dots and their applications in biology 147
4.1.2. Metal-mediated labeling of hexahistidine-tagged proteins 148
4.1.3. SjGST as a tool in biotechnology 149
4.1.4. Aims and research strategy 150
4.2. Results and discussion 152
4.2.1. Expression, purification and characterisation of SjGST and His6-SjGST 152
4.2.2. Investigation on His6-SjGST binding to Ni-NTA-capped quantum dots 156
4.3. Conclusions 163
4.4. Chapter 4 references 164
Chapter 5: Materials and Methods 167
5.1. General materials 168
5.1.1. General reagents 168
5.1.2. Media and solutions 168
5.1.3. Purification buffers 169
5.2. Molecular biology 170
5.2.1. Bacterial cell lines 170
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5.2.2. Plasmids pGEX6P-1, pET-6His-SjGST, pET9-a-mGSTA4, pET15-b-
mGSTM1, pET15-b-hGSTP1, pET11-d-TKB588 and pET11-d-TKB611
170
5.2.3. Oligonucleotide primers 174
5.2.4. DNA manipulation 175
5.2.4.1. Purification of plasmid DNA 175
5.2.4.2. Transformation of E. coli competent cells with recombinant DNA 176
5.2.4.3. Electrophoresis of DNA 176
5.2.4.4. Digestion of DNA with restriction endonucleases 177
5.2.4.5. Gel extraction of DNA 177
5.2.4.6. Direct cloning of PCR products 177
5.2.4.7. Cloning into plasmid vectors 178
5.2.4.8. Storage of bacterial stocks 178
5.2.4.9. Polymerase chain reactions 178
5.2.4.9.1. Amplification of DNA 178
5.2.4.9.2. DNA sequencing 179
5.2.4.9.3. Site-directed mutagenesis 180
5.2.4.9.4. Generation of SjGST_Y7F mutant 180
5.2.4.9.5. Isolation and cloning of bphK_J2315 in pET22-b 181
5.3. Protein work 183
5.3.1. Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE) 183
5.3.2. Expression and purification of GSTs 184
5.3.2.1. Large scale expression 184
5.3.2.2. Purification of SjGST, SjGST_Y7F, mGSTA4-4 and BphK_J2315 186
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5.3.2.3. Purification of His6-SjGST, His6-hGSTP1-1, His6-mGSTM1-1,
TKB588, TKB611 186
5.3.2.4. Sephacryl 200 and Superdex 75 columns calibration 187
5.3.3. Analyses of purified proteins 188
5.3.3.1. Bradford assay 188
5.3.3.2. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS) 189
5.3.3.3. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry 190
5.3.3.4. In vitro glutathione transferase assays 190
5.3.3.4.1. Activity assays 190
5.3.3.4.2. Inhibition studies 193
5.3.3.4.3. Isothermal Calorimetry 196
5.4. Molecular docking 197
5.4.1. Ligand alignments 197
5.4.2. Binding mode prediction of SjGST with 5g 197
5.4.3. Binding mode prediction of hGST P1-1 with 5c 198
5.5. NMR analyses on 3f and 3g 198
5.6 Chapter 5 references 199
Appendices 200
10
Abbreviations
ACE Acetylcholine esterase
ATP Adenosine triphosphate
bp Base pair
BSA Bovine serum albumin
CA Carbonic anhydrase
CaM Calmodulin
CAP Catabolite activator protein
CDNB 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene
CMB Chlorambucil
DCC Dynamic combinatorial chemistry
DCL Dynamic combinatorial library
DCM Dichloromethane
DHLA Dihydrolipoic acid
DMSO Dimethyl sulfoxide
DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid
dNTP Deoxynucleotide triphosphate
EA Ethacrynic acid
EDTA Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid
eEF Eukaryotic elongation factor
EPNP 1,2-epoxy-3-( p-nitrophenoxy)propane
ESI-LC-MS
Electrospray-ionisation liquid-chromatography mass
spectrometry
FRET Fluorescence resonance energy eransfer spectroscopy
GDP Guanosine diphosphate
GSH Glutathione
G-site Glutathione binding site
GSSG Oxidised glutathione
11
GST Glutathione transferase
GTP Guanosine triphosphate
His6 Hexahistidine
HOPDA 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenyl-2,4-dienoate
HPGDS Hematopoietic prostaglandin D-synthases
HPLC High pressure liquid chromatography
hr Hour
H-site Hydrophobic binding site
IC50 Concentration of inhibitor generating 50% of inhibition
IMAC Immobilized metal affinity chromatography
IPTG Isopropyl �-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside
ITC Isothermal calorimetry
K Dissociation constant
Kav Gel phase distribution coefficient
kcat Turnover number
Kd Enzyme-ligand binding constant
Ki Inhibition constant
KM Enzyme-substrate binding constant
LB Luria Bertani
LC-MS Liquid-chromatography mass spectrometry
MAAI Maleylacetoacetate isomerase
MALDI-TOF Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight
MAP Mercapturic acid pathway
MAPEG
Membrane-asssociated enzymes involved in eicosanoid and
glutathione metabolism
min Minute
Msu 1-menaphthyl sulphate
MWCO Molecular weight cut-off
N Stoichiometry of binding
NMR Nuclear magnetic resonance
12
NTA Nitrilotriacetic acid
PBS Phosphate buffered saline
PCR Polymerase chain reaction
PDB Protein Data Bank
PGD Prostaglandin D
PZQ Praziquantel
QD Quantum dots
R Universal gas constant
RMSD Root mean square deviation
RNA Ribonucleic acid
sec Second
SDS-PAGE Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel elecrophoresis
T Absolute temperature
TCHQ Tetrachlorohydroquinone
TEMED Tetramethylethylenediamine
TFA Trifluoroacetic acid
tRNA Transfer ribonucleic acid
UV Ultra-violet
∆H Enthalpy
∆S Entropy
13
Acknowledgements
This research project would not have been possible without the help and
support of several individuals who, in one way or another, contributed to the
preparation and completion of this project.
First of all, I would like to thank Dr Dominic Campopiano and Dr Michael
Greaney who have been my supervisors since the beginning of this study. Thanks for
guiding me in my work, and for letting me the freedom to take initiatives in the
development of my lines of research.
I gratefully acknowledge Prof. Alan Cooper and Prof. Mark Bradley for their
advice and constructive comments throughout this project.
Thanks to Dr Dave Clarke, Dr Marika De Cremoux, and Margaret Nutley for
their guidance in different aspects of my research and for their technical assistance.
This project would not have been possible without the collaboration of Venu
Bhat who worked with me on this project from the start. He was always full of
enthousiasm and resourceful ideas. It was a great pleasure working with him.
I warmly acknowledge the group members of Lab 229. Special thanks to
Karin Bodewits and Philipp Grämlich for their presence, their constructive comments
on this thesis, and for providing me a home when I needed it. Thanks to Géraldine
Eicher for her precious help.
Finally, I want to express my gratitude to my family who always encouraged
me to concentrate on my study. Thanks to Swan for his continual moral support
through the preparation of this thesis.
A special thought to my Grand-father to whom I dedicate this thesis.
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Abstract
Cytosolic glutathione transferases (GSTs) are a large family of enzymes that
play an important role in detoxification of xenobiotics. They catalyse the conjugation
of the glutathione tripeptide (GSH) to a wide range of toxic electrophilic acceptors.
The overall 3D folds and architectures of the catalytic sites of many GSTs are
conserved. They are composed of a well conserved glutathione binding site (G-site)
and a promiscuous hydrophobic binding site (H-site). The 3D structure and ligand
specificity has allowed the sub-classification of the multiple isoforms within the
soluble GST superfamily. GSTs are involved in the drug detoxification and so are the
target of medicinal chemistry programmes but it has proven difficult to generate
isoform-specific inhibitors due to their inherent promiscuity.
In this project, Venughopal Bhat (University of Edinburgh, laboratory of Dr.
Mike Greaney) and I have explored a new platform to probe enzyme specificity.
Protein-directed dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) allows the assembly and
amplification of a ligand within the confines of a binding site. DCC was used as a tool
to explore the promiscuous H-site of four eukaryotic GSTs. I purified recombinant
forms of SjGST, hGST P1-1, mGST M1-1 and mGST A4-4 from E. coli and assayed
them with the universal, synthetic GST substrate 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB).
Venughopal Bhat prepared a ten-member, thermodynamically-controlled, dynamic
combinatorial library (DCL) of acyl hydrazones from a 1-chloro-2-nitrobenzene
aldehyde and ten acylhydrazides. This DCL was incubated with each of the four GST
isozymes (spanning diverse classes) and distinct amplification effects were observed
for SjGST and hGST P1-1. I subsequently carried out several biophysical experiments
in an attempt to rank each of the ligands. These experiements, coupled with molecular
modelling, provided insight into the basis of the observed selectivity.
Bacterial GSTs are thought to play a role in primary metabolism and display a
different GSH-conjugation mechanism compared to the eukaryotic GSTs. A
recombinant form of the beta-class GST from the pathogenic bacterium Burkholderia
15
cenocepacia was isolated, purified and biochemically characterised. The same ten-
member acylhydrazone DCL was interfaced with the bacterial GST which was shown
to amplify a hydrophobic library member that shared structural features with the
known substrate 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenyl-2,4-dienoate (HOPDA).
With the collaboration of Venughopal Bhat, I attempted to explore the
putative active site of a GST-like protein with an unknown function using the same
DCL. Although no amplification was observed, a new aldehyde template was
suggested for future DCC experiments on this protein.
GSTs are widely employed in biotechnology as protein fusion tags to enhance
target protein solubility coupled with a facile enzyme assay. Manish Gupta and Juan
Mareque-Rivas (University of Edinburgh) used the N-terminal, hexahistidine-tagged
SjGST to demonstrate that quantum dots (QDs) coated with nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA)
bound to Ni2+ ions can be used to reversibly and selectively bind, purify, and
fluorescently label a His6-tagged GST in one step with retention of enzymatic activity.
For this prupose, I purified and characterized both the untagged and hexahistidine-
tagged – SjGST prior to their experiments.
16
Chapter 1: Probing the active site of four eukaryotic
glutathione transferases using dynamic combinatorial chemistry
17
1.1. Introduction
1.1.1. Introduction to glutathione transferases
1.1.1.1. Glutathione transferases – role in cellular detoxification
All living organisms are open systems constantly interacting with their
environment. They can take up various nutrient compounds required for growth which
are metabolised through catabolic pathways which degrade these molecules to liberate
their energy and produce small building blocks. Anabolic pathways integrate them into
newly synthesized macromolecules. All these biochemical reactions are rigorously
controlled by various enzymes. Waste and heat are released back to the environment.
A xenobiotic is a chemical which enters a cell but has no physiological
function, or an endogenously produced substance (endobiotic) present in a higher
concentration than expected. Drugs, some food constituents, cosmetics, toxins,
pollutants are considered as xenobiotics in humans because they are not synthesized by
the human body, nor are they essential nutrients. The body removes xenobiotics by
detoxication and secretion of the resulting substances through urine, feces, sweat or
breath [1]. The metabolism of xenobiotics can be divided into three phases: (I)
activation, (II) conjugation and (III) excretion. Phase I and phase II involve the
conversion of a hydrophobic xenobiotic molecule to a relatively more water-soluble and
therefore less toxic metabolite, which can then be easily eliminated from the cell (phase
III). In phase I, a variety of enzymes, mainly cytochrome P450 systems, creates or
modifies a functional group on their substrates. These reactions include reduction,
oxidation, hydrolysis and hydration [2]. In phase II, which can also occur without or
before phase I, xenobiotics are conjugated to endogenous more water-soluble substrates
such as glutathione (GSH), glucuronic acid or glycine. These reactions are catalysed by
several groups of transferases [1, 3-7]. Glutathione Transferases (also known as
Glutathione S-Transferases; GSTs) constitute the most important group of transferases,
and catalyse the conjugation of glutathione to a wide range of electrophilic substrates.
Once conjugated, xenobiotics can be further metabolized: in particular, glutathione
18
conjugates are processed to acetylcysteine conjugates through the mercapturic acid
pathway (MAP) [8]. In phase III, transformed xenobiotics are released from cells
through a variety of membrane ATP-dependant pump systems [9].
1.1.1.2. The mercapturic acid pathway
The body can detoxify many xenobiotics via the glutathione-dependant
mercapturic acid pathway (Figure 1.1.), through inter-organ cooperation between the
liver, kidney and intestine. This starts with the formation of a thioether of glutathione,
which is ultimately converted to a mercapturic acid (S-substituted N-acetylated-L-
cysteine). Mercapturic acids are organic acids, and are therefore more water-soluble than
the entering xenobiotics. Their higher solubility facilitates their excretion [8].
Firstly, whereby an electrophilic molecule is attacked by the tripeptide
glutathione, is catalysed by GSTs. These enzymes are found in all tissues and cell types
but are more abundant in the liver. They bring together the electrophilic centre of a
xenobiotic with the activated thiolate of glutathione. Their glutathione binding site is
well conserved throughout the family but they have a broad specificity towards the
hydrophobic xenobiotics [8, 10-12]. The GST super-family will be presented and
discussed further in the following sections.
The conjugated compound is exported from the cell by an ATP-dependent
transport and is either excreted in the biliary canniculae or transported to the kidney.
Here the glutathione moiety is degraded to a cysteine in a two-step mechanism. γ-
glutamyl transpeptidase – an extra-cellular membrane-bound enzyme – catalyses the
first step by removing a glutamate. The isopeptide bond between the γ-carboxyl of
glutamate and the amino group of cysteine is cleaved, and the γ-glutamyl is either
hydrolysed or transferred to an acceptor amino-acid and a cysteinylglycine conjugate
remains [8, 13-16].
The second step in the degradation of the glutathione moiety is also thought to
happen extracellularly in the biliary canniculae and kidney and is catalysed by a
19
membrane-associated cysteinylglycine dipeptidase. The glycyl is hydrolised, leaving an
S-substituted cysteine conjugate [8, 17].
The remaining conjugate is N-acetylated to give an N-acetylated-S-cysteine
conjugate (mercapturic acid). This reaction occurs intracellularly mainly in the kidney
and is catalysed by a microsomal cysteine S-conjugate N-acetyltransferase that transfers
an acetyl group from acetylcoenzyme A to the amino group of the cysteine conjugate.
Finally, the mercapturic acid is transported out of the cell and excreted in urine [8, 18].
Figure 1.1. Sequence of enzymatic steps in mercapturic acid pathway
RX + γ-Glu-Cys(SH)-Gly
γ-Glu-Cys(SR)-Gly
Glutathione Transferase
Cys(SR)-Gly
X
γ-Gly γ-Glutamyl Transpeptidase
Dipeptidase Gly
Cys(SR)
Acetyl-CoA
CoASH
Cysteine (S-Conjugate) N-Acetyl Transferase
N-acetyl Cys(SR) (mercapturic acid)
20
1.1.1.3. Glutathione: an unusual peptide
1.1.1.3.1. The structure of glutathione
Glutathione – γ-L-glutamyl-L-cysteinylglycine, GSH (Figure 1.2.) – is a natural
antioxidant which plays a crucial role in detoxification processes; in particular, it largely
contributes to the mercapturic acid pathway described above.
Figure 1.2. The structure of L-glutathione
This tripeptide was first isolated in 1921 by Hopkins [19] and its structure was
determined by Nicolet in 1930 [20]. It is widely distributed throughout animal tissues
and plants at high cellular concentrations (~1-10 mM) and is especially concentrated in
the liver (~5-10 mM), which makes GSH the principal cellular non-protein thiol and the
most abundant low molecular weight peptide in eukaryotes. In bacteria, GSH is mostly
present in Gram-negative aerobic species (~3.5-6.6 mM in E. coli) but very rarely in
anaerobes and Gram-positive strains which have developed other low molecular weight
thiols such as mycothiol produced by Actinobacteria or bacillithiol found in Bacilli [21-
23].
GSH presents some unique properties which are closely related to its functions:
- Its characteristic structural features, including the unusual peptide linkage
between the amine group of L−cysteine and the carboxyl group of the L−glutamate side
chain, provides for intra-cellular stability and specificity in glutathione-dependent
enzymes, particularly with GSTs;
- Its cysteinyl residue (pKa of GSH = 9.2) provides a nucleophilic thiol which
allows the formation of conjugates with both endogenous and exogenous compounds;
α β
γ
21
- Its overall negative charge and hydrophilicity increase the solubility of the
xenobiotics to which it becomes conjugated [12, 24-27].
1.1.1.3.2. Glutathione metabolism
GSH metabolism occurs through the γ-glutamyl cycle which can be divided in
six steps.
GSH synthesis takes place in the cytoplasm and involves two ATP-dependant
enzymatic steps (Figure 1.3.). The first step is rate-limiting and consists in the
condensation of an L-glutamate and an L-cysteine. This step is limited by the feedback
of competitive inhibition by glutathione and by the availability of L-cysteine. This
reaction is catalysed by a glutamate cysteine ligase (GCL) which requires either Mg2+ or
Mn2+ and coupled ATP hydrolysis. L-glutamate and ATP first react to give a tightly
bound γ-glutamyl phosphate which reacts with L-cysteine. Therefore an amide bond is
formed between the γ-carboxyl group of glutamate and the amino group of cysteine.
GCL is a dimeric enzyme composed of a heavy unit with competent but low catalytic
activity and a modulatory activity light subunit lowering the Km for glutamate and
increasing the Ki for glutathione. GSH cell levels are closely related to GCL expression
and activity. Oxidative stress caused by diverse agents can transcriptionally and post-
transcriptionally activate the GCL subunits. Increases in GSH levels, GCL mRNA levels
and GCL activity are also observed in drug-resistant tumor cell lines [24, 26, 28-32].
22
Figure 1.3. Glutathione biosynthesis mechanism
The second step of glutathione biosynthesis is catalysed by a glutathione
synthase for which chemical mechanisms are similar to those of GCL: L-g-glutamyl-L-
cysteine and ATP first react to form tightly bound L-g-glutamyl-L-cysteinylphosphate,
and that intermediate then reacts with glycine to form GSH [24, 26, 28-30, 33].
The breakdown of GSH begins outside of the cell and is catalysed by the γ-
glutamyl transpeptidase involved in the MAP. The γ-glutamyl moiety is transferred to
acceptors such as amino acids, certain dipeptides and water. γ-glutamyl amino acids are
then transported into the cell where they become substrates of γ-glutamyl
cyclotransferase, which converts these products into 5-oxo-L-proline. The ATP
dependant conversion of 5-oxo-L-proline to L-glutamate is catalysed by the intracellular
enzyme 5-oxo-prolinase.
23
The cysteinylglycine formed in the transpeptidase reaction is split by
dipeptidase to generate cysteine and glycine [24, 28]. Most cells readily take up cysteine
and the majority is incorporated into GSH, while the rest is either incorporated into
proteins or degraded into sulphate and taurine. The γ-glutamyl cycle allows GSH to be
used as a continuous cellular source of cysteine [26].
1.1.1.3.3. Glutathione functions
In eukaryotic cells, GSH is mostly stored in the cytoplasm (almost 90%) where
it serves several vital functions, 10% is found in mitochondria and a small percentage is
in the endoplasmic reticulum [34, 35].
1.1.1.3.3.1. Antioxidant function
The main function of glutathione is to protect cells against reactive oxidants.
All aerobic organisms are subject to oxidative stress from the respiration metabolism.
Reactive oxygen species, including free radicals such as superoxide, hydroxyl radicals
and non-radical species like hydrogen peroxide are formed and can lead to lipid
peroxidation and cellular damage.
GSH primarily exists in two redox forms: reduced and oxidised glutathione
disulfide (GSSG). The latter only represents less than one percent of the total
glutathione, it can be reduced back to GSH at the expense of NADPH through the action
of a glutathione reductase. When this reduction is overcome by a severe oxidative stress,
GSSG can be actively exported out of the cell to prevent a shift in the redox equilibrium.
The presence of a sulfhydryl group makes GSH function as an antioxidant; thiols react
rapidly and non-enzymatically with oxidising species and some of their oxidation
products can be reversibly reduced by various redox-active enzymes such as thioredoxin
and glutaredoxin.
24
1.1.1.3.3.2. Detoxifying function
As described previously in section 1.1.1.2., glutathione plays a major role in the
detoxification of many exogenous and endogenous compounds through the mercapturic
acid pathway. Conjugation to xenobiotics irreversibly consumes GSH [26].
1.1.1.3.3.3. Maintenance of the intracellular redox state and cell signalling
GSH is the most abundant intracellular low-molecular-mass thiol and therefore
is an important mediator in the maintenance of the intracellular redox state and the
essential thiol status of proteins. It may be thought of as an intracellular redox buffer
which can act as an electrophile scavenger as well as an electron donor via the
sulfhydryl group of a cysteine residue.
Glutathione undergoes protein disulfide exchange as follows:
Protein-SSG + GSH � Protein-SH + GSSG
This reversible reaction is catalysed by a thiol transferase and therefore the
equilibrium depends on the concentrations of GSH and GSSG. During oxidative stress,
disulfide exchange between proteins and glutathione constitutes a protective mechanism
for thiols, preventing further oxidation, and plays roles in cell signaling. In particular,
protein S-glutathionylation is known to regulate several metabolic processes including
redox homeostasis, ion channel activity, protein folding, cell growth and apoptosis [21,
26, 30, 36-42].
1.1.1.4. The glutathione transferase super-family
Glutathione Transferases (EC 2.5.1.18, GSTs) are a large family of phase II
detoxification enzymes which catalyses the first step in the mercapturic acid pathway.
25
The general chemical mechanism of these enzymes is thought to involve nucleophilic
attack by the thiol of glutathione on an electrophilic acceptor substrate (Figure 1.4.) [43].
Figure 1.4. Glutathione conjugation to a generic xenobiotic substrate (X) catalysed by GST results in the formation of a glutathione-S-X conjugate.
Typical GST-catalyzed reactions are varied, and include Michael-type addition
with ethacrynic acid (EA), nucleophilic addition to the epoxide phenantrene 9,10-oxide,
hydroperoxide reduction with cumene hydroperoxide, and thiolysis of 4-nitrophenyl
acetate to name a few (Figure 1.5.) [44].
26
Figure 1.5. Examples of reactions catalysed by GSTs: a) Michael-type addition; b) Nucleophilic addition; c) Hydroperoxide reduction d) Thiolysis.
GST assay
Most GSTs can catalyse the conjugation of GSH to 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene
(CDNB; Figure 1.6.), which is considered as the ‘universal GST substrate’. It has been
used since 1974 to monitor the enzymatic activity of various GST by visible
spectroscopy, as the conjugate resulting from the reaction absorbs at 340 nm (� = 9600
M-1.cm-1) [43].
27
Figure 1.6. Conjugation of glutathione and CDNB catalysed by many GSTs.
GSTs were discovered in 1961 by Booth et al., who partially purified and
characterised a cytosolic GST isolated from rat liver [45]. Since then, GSTs have been
extensively studied and classified according to a variety of criteria including protein
sequences, kinetic and ternary/quaternary structural properties. There are four families
of GSTs: two of those, cytosolic and mitochondrial, are soluble and distantly related.
The third family, microsomal, is referred to membrane-associated enzymes involved in
eicosanoid and glutathione metabolism (MAPEG). The fourth family is less related than
the three other and is represented by the bacterial fosfomycin resistance proteins FosA
and FosB [46-50]. Recent, detailed reviews have been published on the GST family so
in this thesis I will highlight GSTs of interest to this study.
1.1.1.4.1. Cytosolic glutathione transferases
Cytosolic GSTs represent the largest family and are found in a wide range of
species including mammals, plants, invertebrates, insects, fungi and bacteria.
Historically, mainly based on amino-acid sequence similarity, they have been divided
into seven classes: Alpha, Mu, Omega, Pi, Sigma, Theta, Zeta. The letter designation of
the enzymes (A, M, O, P, S, T and Z, respectively) shows their assignments to one of
these classes and their subunit composition or isoenzyme type is designated by Arabic
28
numerals. Single-letter prefixes denote species of origin (e.g. m, mouse; h, human). For
instance, a homodimer of type 4 alpha subunits from the mouse is mGSTA4-4. Other
classes: Beta, Delta, Epsilon, Lambda, Phi, Tau and the “U” class have been identified in
plants, insects and bacteria. The plant and bacterial enzymes often serve more
specialised functions than detoxification, for instance they can take part in the transport
of pigments or dehalogenation of hydrocarbons [46-53].
1.1.1.4.1.1. Protein architecture of cytosolic glutathione transferases
In general, GST monomers are ~25-30 kDa and the amino acid sequence
identity within a class is high (more than 40%) whereas the identity between classes is
much lower (less than 30%). Cytosolic GSTs are mostly homodimers with a common
three–dimensional structural fold. Each monomer contains two main domains connected
by a short linker region (Figure 1.7.).
29
Figure 1.7. Crystal structure of a ligand-free hGSTP1 monomer (PDB 1EOG). α helices and β strands are represented in red and yellow, respectively. The peptide linker connecting the two domains is shown in blue.
The N-terminal domain or domain 1 constitutes roughly one-third of the protein
and is classified as part of the thioredoxin superfamily fold [54]. It is composed of three
� helices and a mixed � sheet of the sequence �1-�1-�2-�2-�3-�4-�3. These elements
fold so that the � strands are in the order of 4-3-1-2 with strand 3 antiparallel to the
Domain 1 Domain 2
GST monomer
N terminal region
C terminal region
Peptide linker
ββββ 1
ββββ 2
ββββ 3
ββββ 4
α α α α 1
α α α α 2
α α α α 3 α α α α 4
α α α α 5
α α α α 6
α α α α 7
α α α α 8
30
others. The � sheet is almost planar with �1 and �3 helices below this plane and �2
above it. There is a loop with a proline residue in the cis conformation between �2 and
�3 which helps to maintain the correct structure for catalytic activity [55]. Most GSTs
present a SNAIL/TRAIL motif (i.e. Ser-Asp-Ala-Ile-Leu/Thr-Arg-Ala-Ile-Leu) in the
α3 helix, which includes residues contributing to the GSH binding site.
The larger C-terminal domain or domain 2 is an all-�-helical domain, the core
of which generally consists of a group of five helices (the number of α helices varies
widely between the classes). This domain is less conserved at the sequence and
structural levels, with the helices varying in number, length, curvature, and orientation.
The dimeric structures of GSTs (~ 50 kDa) are very stable and class-specific.
The subunits are non-covalently bound and are related by a two-fold axis (C2
symmetry). Interactions between the two subunits are mainly hydrophobic but differ
between the classes. GST dimerisation allows for the construction of two fully
functional active sites which are partly located at the dimer interface [47, 49, 50, 56].
1.1.1.4.1.2. G- , H- and L- sites
GSTs are highly specific towards GSH and relatively more flexible with the
electrophilic substrate. Each GST active site can be divided into a GSH binding site or
“G-site” and a hydrophobic substrate binding site or “H-site” (Figure 1.8.).
31
Figure 1.8. A. Structure of hGSTM1-1 with one molecule of glutathionyl-S-dinitrobenzene bound in each active site (grey: monomer 1; orange: monomer 2; green: glutathione moiety; red: dinitrobenzene moiety). Structure of the same GST illustrating the G- and the H- sites (grey: monomer 1; orange: monomer 2; green: G-site; red: H-site; PDB 1XWK) [57]. This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
G-site and activation of glutathione
The G-site is located in a cleft between the N-terminal domain of one subunit
and the C-terminal domain of the other subunit, so it is only completed after
dimerisation. Most of the G-site residues are located in domain 1 and involve a specific
network of polar bonds with GSH (Figure 1.9.). Amino-acids contributing to binding of
GSH at the G-site are generally well conserved within classes. The tripeptide binds
GSTs in an extended conformation with its main chain forming hydrogen-bonds with the
peptide-loop connecting α2 to β3. This interaction is important for the recognition and
orientation of GSH in the active site. The γ-glutamyl moiety anchors the tripeptide in the
G-site by interacting extensively with a hydrophilic pocket located near the subunit
interface. The glycyl resides near the solvent-accessible surface of the protein, with its
carboxyl group strongly sequestered at the G-site. Finally, the cysteinyl sulfur points
toward the subunit to which it is bound. Depending on the class of GST, the thiol of
GSH is thought to be activated and stabilised by a tyrosine, a serine or a cysteine residue
A B
32
(Figure 1.10.). Within the π and α classes, it was found that mutation of a tyrosine to a
phenylalanine dramatically decreased the catalytic activity but did not significantly
reduce the ability to bind GSH, suggesting that this interaction does not have an essential
binding-role. [46, 56, 58, 59].
Figure 1.9. Representation of the hGSTM1-1 G-site residues interacting with glutathione (PDB 1XW6) through polar bonds. (black: amino acids from domain 1 of monomer 1; orange: Asp105 from domain 2 of monomer 2; violet: glutathione) [57]. This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
As GSH binds to the G-site, the pKa value of the thiol drops from ~9.5 to ~6.8
units, which promotes deprotonation of the GSH at physiological pH (~7.4). Proton
release and extrusion from the active site takes place via an initial conformational
rearrangement of GSH, followed by a water-assisted proton transfer between the thiol
group of GSH cysteinyl residue and the GSH glutamyl α-carboxyl group. When the
catalytic residue is a tyrosine or a serine, the anionic form of GSH is stabilised by the
available hydroxyl group, and can subsequently react more readily with electrophilic
substrates [56, 60]. GSTs possessing this tyrosine have higher activity toward the GSH
conjugation reaction than GSTs containing a serine [61] as the hydroxyl group of a
tyrosine is more acidic (pKa ~10.5) than the hydroxyl group of a serine (pKa ~13).
Therefore, the anionic form of GSH would make stronger interaction with the tyrosine,
resulting in a higher stability of the activated substrate.
TYR6
TRP7
TRP45
LEU59
ASN58
LYS49
ARG42
GLN71
SER72 ASP105
33
A theta-class GST (hGSTT2-2) with a catalytically active serine residue has
been demonstrated to act as a sulfatase with menaphthyl sulphate, which generates
menaphthyl-GSH and free sulphate [62]. Although the enzymes residues involved in this
catalysis have not been clearly identified, it has been shown that the active site serine is
not essential in this reaction. The architecture of the active site could contribute to
catalysis in this isozyme. Therefore, these enzymes may have evolved to specifically
catalyse certain types of reactions [53].
Figure 1.10. Catalytic residues in GSTs. In most GST classes, a tyrosine residue (a: hGSTM1 crystal structure complexed with glutathione; 1XW6) interacts with GSH to stabilize the thiolate anion, with a consequent decrease in pKa. In the theta, kappa and the zeta classes, this role is carried out by a serine residue (b: hGSTK1 crystal structure complexed with glutathione sulfinate; 1YZX), while in the omega and beta classes a mixed disulphide is formed with a cysteine residue (c: hGSTO1 crystal structure complexed with glutathione; 1EEM). This figure was generated using PyMOL.
The mechanism of GSH activation by a catalytic tyrosine is not well
understood. Nishida and co-workers [63] highlighted the presence of an additional
conserved histidine residue in the active sites of beta-class GSTs. They suggested that
the sulphur atom of the GSH thiol group makes hydrogen bonds with the backbone NH
and the SH group of the essential cysteine and with the imidazole ring of the nearby
histidine (His106 in the E. coli GST; [63]). The deprotonation of the GSH thiol group
would be accelerated by either the imidazole ring of the histidine or by the sulphur atom
of the cysteine.
a b c
34
GSTs containing a cysteine in their active site often show dehalogenation
activity. In general, this reaction is a two-step mechanism [64]:
(1) A molecule of GSH is added to a halogenated substrate, and the halogen
atom is eliminated. The dehalogenated molecule is released by nucleophilic attack of the
active site cysteine thiolate on the sulphur of the GSH moiety, yielding a mixed disulfide
linkage;
(2) Regeneration of the enzyme is initiated by the binding of a second GSH at
the H-site for a final disulfide exchange. The result is a reduced catalytically active
cysteine thiol and the release of GSSG from the active site.
H-site and the binding of electrophiles
In contrast to GSH binding to domain 1, residues from domain 2 are mainly
responsible for binding of the electrophilic substrates. The H-site is highly hydrophobic
and includes the active-site loop connecting β1 to α1, the C-terminal region of α4 and
the C-terminal segment of the peptide linker. The great diversity of H-site topologies
would explain the differences in electrophilic substrate specificity between GST classes
[46, 56].
L-site or ligandin binding site
In addition to their enzymatic properties, GSTs are able to bind hydrophobic
molecules, including hemin, bilirubin, bile salts, steroids, thyroid hormones, fatty acids
and drugs. This ligandin property was observed in early work and suggests a role of
storage or transport [65, 66]. The ligandin binding site or “L-site” has been observed in
many GST isoforms. Its location remains uncertain and seems to be variable among the
classes. For instance, McTigue et al. have shown that the drug Praziquantel could bind
to the dimer interface of a GST from the parasitic worm Schistosoma japonicum,
whereas the human GST P1-1 L-site would be located at a buffer binding site in the H-
site [67-69].
35
1.1.1.4.2. Glutathione transferases as therapeutic targets
1.1.1.4.2.1. Mammalian cytosolic glutathione transferases and cancer
Development of acquired drug resistance is a major problem in chemotherapy
treatment. Exposure to anti-cancer agents can lead to an induction and expression of
gene products that protect the cells. In particular, over-expression of GST isozymes has
been reported in a number of different human cancers when compared to normal tissues,
and it has been demonstrated that it is correlated with clinical drug resistance. GSTs can
serve two distinct roles in the development of drug resistance: they can increase the rate
of direct drug detoxification; and they can regulate the mitogen-activated protein kinase
pathway that participates in cellular survival and apoptosis signalling [70-73].
1.1.1.4.2.1.1. Mammalian cytosolic glutathione transferases
Three-dimensional ribbon structural representations of the mammalian GSTs
discussed below are shown in Figure 1.12. Isoform-specific features are summarised in
Table 1.1.
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.1. Alpha-, mu- and pi-classes
The Alpha, Mu and Pi classes are the most abundant in mammals and the most
extensively studied GSTs. Based on sequence alignments and substrate specificity
criteria, several isoenzymes were recognized as belonging to Alpha, Mu or Pi class. In
humans, four distinct subunits have been characterized in the Alpha class (A1 to A4),
four in the Mu class (M1 to M4) and only one belongs to the Pi class (P1). Mammalian
Alpha/Mu/Pi overall structures are very similar, they share 26 conserved residues (pair-
wise sequence identity: alpha-mu 20%, pi-mu 30 % and alpha-pi 32 %), but they show
some important points of difference in the detailed structure, in particular in domain 2
[46, 49, 53, 56].
36
The three classes share the same type of hydrophobic “lock and key”
interaction between the subunits 1 and 2. The ‘key’ is an aromatic residue (Phe-52 in
Alpha, Phe-56 in Mu and Tyr-49 in Pi) extending from the loop preceding �-3. It fits
into a hydrophobic ‘lock’ composed by helices �-4 and �-5 of the other subunit (Figure
1.11.). The interface creates a V-shape crevice which is solvent-accessible. Mu-class
enzymes have a characteristic mu-loop which is located between �-2 and �-2, creating a
deeper active-site cleft. This additional loop is not essential in GST activity but it plays a
role in substrate binding [46, 49, 53, 56, 74].
Figure 1.11. View of a class mu dimer (hGSTM2-2, PDB: 3GUR) down the two fold axis relating the two subunits, showing the ‘lock and key’ interaction of an aromatic residue (Phe-56) from domain 1 between α-4 and α-5 from domain 2 of the opposite subunit. This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
The �-Glu moiety of GSH interacts with a hydrophilic complementary pocket
near the subunit interface. The α and π class structures contain a salt bridge between an
arginine (Arg-14 in Alpha, Arg-13 in Mu) and a glutamate (Glu-103 in Alpha, Glu-95 in
Mu) which stabilizes the protein conformation at the �-Glu site. A conserved tyrosine
residue in �-1 (Tyr-8 in Alpha, Tyr-6 in Mu and Tyr-7 in Pi) has been proposed to
activate the thiol group of GSH. Estimated pKa values for the thiol group of glutathione
are 5.7 – 6.9 for class mu, 6.7 – 7.0 for class alpha and 6.3 for class pi. In the alpha class
structure, the sulfur atom of bound glutathione is also hydrogen-bonded to the guanidine
group of Arg-14. In the mu class, GSH cysteinyl carboxyl group is not sequestered by
37
the protein backbone peptide loop connecting α-2 to β-3 as in the alpha and pi classes,
but by a Trp-7. This disparity is responsible for the difference in GSH conformation
taking place mostly at the Cys-Gly peptide bond in the mu class G-site, compared to the
alpha and pi classes [46, 49, 53, 56].
In domain 2, only the interaction with a conserved aspartic residue of �-4 (Asp-
100 in Alpha, Asp-105 in Mu and Asp-96 in Pi), which is part of the G-site, is common
to all structures. The Alpha-class domain contains an extra C-terminal �-helix (�-9)
which packs onto the hydrophobic site and contributes to a smaller and more
hydrophobic active site. This extra helix is important for GST dimer stabilization and
non-substrate ligand binding, and lowers both the rate of GSH binding and the pKa value
of the catalytic residue Tyr9 [46, 49, 53, 56, 75].
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.2. Theta-class
Theta-class GSTs are widespread in nature, they have been found in a diverse
range of organisms including bacteria, plants and insects. Three main structural features
distinguish this class from the Alpha, Mu and Pi classes, with which they only share 7%
of similarity: theta class enzymes lack a “lock and key” interaction between their
subunits; the cleft at their dimer interface is less pronounced; and their catalytic residue
is a serine rather than a tyrosine. Substrate affinity has also been used to differentiate
Alpha/Mu/Pi GSTs from those of the Theta class. Theta GSTs have the particularity not
to bind affinity matrices such as GSH-agarose or S-hexyl-GSH-agarose, and most of
them lack activity with CDNB. Two subunits (T1 and T2) were identified in human,
sharing only 55% sequence identity and showing distinct substrate specificity. In
particular, hGST T1-1 can conjugate GSH to halogenated organic compounds such as
1,2-epoxy-3-(p-nitrophenoxy)propane and shows some peroxidase activity with organic
hydroperoxides; whereas hGST T2-2 is able to transfer GSH to sulfate esters, unlike
other GSTs, and is believed to play an important role in the prevention of
hepatocarcinogesis [53, 76-79].
38
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.3. Omega-class
A new class of GST was identified ten years ago by analysis of human
expressed sequence tag sequences, and the crystal structure of hGST O1-1 was
determined [80]. Since then, other omega GSTs have been found in varied organisms
such as pig, rat, nematodes and insects. Omega class enzymes present several marked
structural differences compared to the other classes: they have an unusual 19-20 proline-
rich N-terminal extension; their domain 2 is composed of seven α-helices instead of the
usual five; their inter-subunit interface is considerably more open; and their catalytic
residue is a cysteine, unlike other eukaryote GSTs. GST O1-1 has low activity with most
GST substrates, including CDNB but has a high thiol transferase activity. This isoform
is strongly expressed in both skeletal and cardiac muscle and is thought to play a role in
protecting cells from apoptosis by Ca2+ channel modulation [53, 80, 81].
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.4. Sigma-class
The Sigma class was identified by protein sequence alignments and crystal
structural analysis revealed some important distinctive features, especially at the dimer
interface and in the active site. Sigma class GSTs usually show hydrophilic interactions
between the two monomers and lacks the ‘lock and key’ motif. Although GSH binds to
the active site, Sigma class GSTs lack GST activity, which is thought to be due to
insertion of eleven residues between the conserved α-4 and α-5 helices. This insertion
closes up the conformation around the active site. Sigma GSTs also contain a third
binding site for GSH conjugates which may play a role in conjugate transport [53, 82].
Hematopoietic Prostaglandin D-Synthases (H-PGDSs), which are involved in
prostaglandin D (PGD) biosynthesis by catalysing the isomerisation of prostaglandin
PGDH to PGD2, belong to the GST Sigma class. Although they share more than 35 % of
similarity with Sigma GSTs, H-PGDSs have a hydrophilic dimer interface with a lock
and key interaction similar to that found in Alpha/Mu/Pi classes [83-85].
39
1.1.1.4.2.1.1.5. Zeta-class
The Zeta class was identified by phylogenetic analyses and was found in plants,
worms and mammals. Zeta GSTs are also known as maleylacetoacetate isomerase
(MAAI) and catalyse the glutathione-dependant cis-trans isomerisation of
maleylacetoacetate to fumarylacetoacetate, which is the penultimate step in the catalysis
of phenylalanine and tyrosine. MAAI is also involved in the detoxication of carcinogen
dichloroacetic acid to glyoxylic acid. Zeta GSTs have low GSH-conjugating activity
with CDNB. It can be explained by the presence of a very small, polar active site. Zeta
class GSTs possess a hydrophobic dimer interface, lacking a ‘V shape’, as in the Theta
class GSTs. There is a ‘lock and key’ motif where an unusual methionine residue plays
the role of the key, and the catalytically essential residue is thought to be a serine
(Ser14) [53, 86-88].
40
Figure 1.12. Crystal structures of alpha (hGST A2 complexed with GSH; PDB: 2WJU), mu (hGST M2 complexed with GSH; 3GUR), pi (hGST P1 complexed with nitrosyl glutathione; 2A2R), theta (hGST T1 complexed with 1-menaphthyl glutathione conjugate; 3LJR), omega (hGST O1 complexed with GSH; 1EEM), sigma (hGST S1 complexed with GSH; 3EE2) and zeta (hGST Z1 complexed with GSH; 1FW1). The views are of a single subunit perpendicular to the twofold axis of each dimer. Proteins are shown in grey, ligands are in blue, essential active residues (Tyr, Ser or Cys) are in yellow and isoform-specific structural features are coloured in red. This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
alpha mu pi
theta omega sigma
zeta
41
Table 1.1. Isoform-specific features of mammalian GSTs
GST class Number of
isoforms Essential
catalytic
residue
Structural/Activity specificity
Alpha 5 Tyr/Arg Extra �-helix (�-9)
Mu 6 Tyr Mu loop between �-2 and �-2
Omega 1 Cys Proline-rich N-terminal extension Open dimer interface Two extra �-helices in domain 2
Pi 1 Tyr Unknown
Sigma 1 Tyr Lack of a ‘lock and key’ motif at the dimer interface Hydrophilic dimer interactions 3rd binding site for GSH conjugates Prostaglandin D synthase activity
Theta 2 Ser Lack of a ‘lock and key’ motif at the dimer interface Small active site Lack of a V-shaped dimer interface No binding to GSH affinity matrices
Zeta 1 Ser Very small polar active site Lack of a V-shaped dimer interface Low GSH-conjugating activity with CDNB Maleylacetate isomerase activity Inhibited by dichloroacetic acid
42
1.1.1.4.2.1.2. Drug detoxification
Several anti-cancer agents such as busulfan, melphalan, chlorambucil or
thiotepa are substrates of GSTs and can be directly inactivated through catalytic
conjugation to GSH. For instance, GST-� from human colon adenocarcinoma cells are
40-fold more expressed in the presence of the anti-cancer drug chlorambucil (CMB), and
catalyse its conjugation with GSH to form monochloromonoglutathionyl CMB. This
conjugate is more water soluble and thus more easily removed from the cells (Figure
1.13.) [70, 73, 89-93].
Figure 1.13. Conjugation of Chlorambucil and GSH via GST-�.
1.1.1.4.2.2. SjGST as a drug target in schistosomiasis treatment
1.1.1.4.2.2.1. Schistosomiasis
Schistosomiasis is a parasitic disease found in tropical and subtropical areas,
caused by several species of platyhelminths of the genus Schistosoma. It is the second
most serious parasitic disease after malaria. More than 200 million people are affected
and around 200,000 deaths are caused annually. Three main species of flatworms are
43
responsible for schistosomiasis: Schistosoma mansoni, Schistosoma japonicum and
Schistosoma haematobium. S. mansoni and S. japonicum cause the intestinal form of
schistosomiasis, while S. haematobium causes the urinary form. Symptoms are varied
depending on the species of infected schistosome but include abdominal pain, diarrhea,
fever, haematuria and egg granulomas [94-96].
Resistance is developing to the leading anti-schistosomal drug – Praziquantel
(PZQ; Figure 1.14.) – currently available for treatment. Although its mode of action is
not exactly known at present, it is thought that PZQ increases the permeability of the
parasite tegument for calcium ions. The drug thereby induces muscle contractions of the
parasites resulting in paralysis in the contracted state [97, 98].
�
�
�
�
Figure 1.14. Structure of Praziquantel (PZQ).
1.1.1.4.2.2.2. The 26 kDa GST from Schistosoma japonicum
GSTs present a major defense mechanism for the schistosomes as they contain
very low levels of other detoxification enzymes. Therefore, they are under investigation
as targets for antischistosomal drugs to replace or to combine with those currently used.
GSTs from helminthes are mostly expressed in the cytoplasm but secretory GSTs are
also commonly expressed. The latter feature makes helminth GSTs tempting targets for
vaccine development. S. japonicum possesses two GST isozymes, of 26 kDa and 28 kDa
monomeric molecular weight. The 26 kDa enzyme has had great impact in
biotechnology and is widely used as a fusion protein, allowing expression of proteins
44
which otherwise would have poor expression levels and simplifying purification through
the use of immobilized glutathione [53, 95, 99-101].
The S. japonicum 26 kDa GST (SjGST) structure resembles the Mu-class
GSTs. Domain 1 adopts the usual thioredoxin fold involving a four-stranded �-sheet
surrounded by 3 �-helices. Between �-2 and �-2, sjGST shows a shortened version of
the mu loop. Domain 2 contains five helices. There is a coil at the C-terminal end
(residues 195-218) with a unique hairpin loop (211-218) exposed to the solvent. The C-
terminal tail is close to the loop between �-2 and �2, helping to enclose the G site. As
observed for the alpha, mu and pi mammalian isoforms described previously, the sjGST
homodimer shows a ‘lock and key’ interaction. The essential catalytic residue is a
tyrosine in position 7 (Figure 1.15.) [68, 102-104].
Figure 1.15. Crystal structure of homodimer (a: one monomer is shown in grey, the other monomer in orange) and G-site (b: catalytic tyrosine 7 is shown in blue, GSH in pink) of the 26 kDa SjGST in complex with GSH (PDB 1UA5). This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
To understand the mode of action of PZQ a crystal structure of the 26 kDa GST
from S. japonicum bound to the drug has been determined. At therapeutic
concentrations, PZQ binds one drug per GST homodimer in the intersubunit cleft
adjoining the two catalytic sites (Figure 1.16.). Contacts are made with Gln67, Gly-97,
Leu100, Asp101, Tyr104, and Arg108 from one subunit and with Tyr-104 of the second
subunit. Most GSTs do not have the Tyr104 and are thus unlikely to bind the drug in the
a) b)
45
same position. However, in contrast to its perceived mode of action, PZQ does not seem
to inhibit sjGST enzyme activity. Its binding site is about 9.6 Å from the G site’s
essential tyrosine, so PZQ is not likely to bind with GSH [68, 105].
Figure 1.16. Crystal structure of the sjGST homodimer (one monomer in grey, the other monomer in yellow; PDB: 1GTB) showing PZQ (in pink) bound in the intersubunit cleft. The two catalytic tyrosine residues are shown in blue to indicate the positions of the active sites [68]. This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
1.1.1.4.2.3. Glutathione transferase inhibitors and pro-drugs
1.1.1.4.2.3.1. Inhibitors
Several approaches are currently used to synthesize GST inhibitors, including
GS-R conjugates, GSH peptide analogs and nonpeptide analogs, bivalent inhibitors and
ligandin-type inhibitors. A broad class of GST potential inhibitors exists, but they are
therapeutically limited regarding their toxicity, carcinogenicity, or unsuitability as a drug
for human use. Moreover, as GST up regulation in cancer cells often concerns certain
isoforms, an ideal inhibitor should be isoform specific [44].
46
1.1.1.4.2.3.1.1. GS-R conjugates
The highly conserved G-site and the H-site versatility in GSTs have been used
to design GSH-conjugate inhibitors. The GSH moiety allows anchoring of the ligand
into the active site, whereas the variability of the H-site among the isoforms provides a
source for isoform specificity. However, the fact that substrates can adopt different
orientations within the H-site makes the drug rational design complicated.
An example of this is Ethacrynic acid (EA) a diuretic drug, commercially
known as Edecrin, which is used to treat high blood pressure and the swelling caused by
various medical problems such as congestive heart failure, liver failure and kidney
failure. It acts by inhibiting a sodium-potassium-chloride transporter in the kidneys
[106]. EA was also found to form a conjugate with GSH via Michael addition on its �,�-
unsaturated ketone moiety, both spontaneously and by GST-driven catalysis. EA and its
glutathione conjugate inhibit the GST-�, -� and -� classes by direct binding to the
isozymes active sites [107]. The crystal structure of human GSTP1-1 in complex with
EA has been solved, showing that EA can bind GSTs in two different modes (Figure
1.17.) [108, 109]. After in vitro and animals studies, EA has been reported to potentiate
the cytotoxic effects of anti-cancer agents such as chlorambucil and melphalan in human
colon carcinoma cell lines [110].
Figure 1.17. Crystal structures of hGSTP1-1 (PDB files: left 3GSS; right 11GS) showing the two binding modes of EA glutathione conjugate. hGSTP1-1 surface is shown in grey, EA conjugate in pink, the catalytic tyrosine residue in blue [108, 109]. This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
47
Other glutathione conjugates such as S-alkyl and S-benzyl GSH are used in
vitro as probes, biochemical inhibitors or in affinity resins (Figure 1.18.) [111].
Figure 1.18. Chemical structures of EA, S-hexylglutathione and S-benzylglutathione.
1.1.1.4.2.3.1.2. Bivalent inhibitors
A new type of tight binding and isoform-selective inhibitors was developed by
Atkins and co-workers in 2003 [112]. In their approach, the presence of two active sites
separated by an accessible cleft in GSTs allowed them to design molecules with multiple
binding domains. These inhibitors interact with active sites of each GST monomer
simultaneously. As the distance between the actives sites vary among the isoforms, the
length and nature of the linker connecting the inhibitor extremities interacting with the
active sites allows for isoform selectivity [113]. Several bivalent compounds with
different binding elements and linkers were synthesised. For instance, an inhibitor based
on the EA-GSH conjugate was found to be 75 times more selective for GSTA1-1 over
48
GSTP1-1 (Figure 1.19.) [114]. The development of drugs based on this approach is
currently being explored.
��
��
��
��
����
����
��
Figure 1.19. Bivalent inhibitor based on the GS-EA conjugate [114].
1.1.1.4.2.3.2. Glutathione transferase - activated pro-drugs
A pro-drug is a designed pharmacological substance which is administered in
an inactive form and is activated by enzymes that are specifically elevated in target
tissues. As GST levels are particularly high in cancer cells, they are good candidates for
activating pro-drugs and releasing anti-cancer chemotherapeutic drugs in tumours. This
approach allows an increased delivery of anticancer agents in a tumour tissue, and a
minimized toxicity toward normal tissues [44, 73]. There are currently three types of
GST targeted pro-drugs which are metabolized to turn into nitrogen mustards [115, 116],
cytolytic nitric oxide [117] or thiopurine [118]. The most advanced of the GST-activated
pro-drug candidates is TLK286, which is currently in phase 3 clinical trials. TLK286 is a
GSH analogue sulfone derivative, activated by GST P1-1 and GST A1-1. The active site
tyrosine would act as a base and promote a �-elimination reaction that cleaves the
prodrug into a GST inhibitor (GS-vinyl-sulfone) and a DNA alkylating agent (nitrogen
mustard) (Figure 1.20.) [44, 115, 116, 119].
49
Figure 1.20. Activation of TLK286 (�-glutamyl-�-amino-�-(2-ethyl-N,N,N’,N’-tetrakis(2-chloroethyl)phosphorodiamidate)-sulfonyl-propionyl-(R)-(-) phenylglycine) by hGST P1-1.
1.1.2. Dynamic combinatorial chemistry as an exploring tool in isoform
specificity
Dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) is based on the reversibility of the
reaction that links building blocks together. A dynamic combinatorial library (DCL) is
governed by thermodynamics rather than kinetics and is therefore able to respond to
external influences. According to Le Châtelier’s principle: ‘If a chemical system at
equilibrium experiences a change in concentration, temperature, volume, or partial
pressure, then the system alters in order to minimize, or counteract the effect of
disturbance’. Therefore, stabilisation of a library member through molecular recognition
will generate a change in the equilibrium composition that will favour the formation of
this species at the expense of the others.
50
1.1.2.1. Protein-directed dynamic combinatorial chemistry
Under thermodynamic conditions, a biological target such as an enzyme is used
to select, stabilise and therefore amplify an active ligand or an inhibitor, which
assembles within the confines of a binding site, directly from the library pool. The
reaction between the components is then frozen, and the best binders identified and
isolated through analysis of the DCL population (Figure 1.21.). Protein-directed DCC
therefore constitutes a new efficient approach for studying, discovering, and ranking
novel protein ligands, where chemical synthesis of drug candidates and biological
binding assays are combined in only one step [120-124].
Figure 1.21. The principle of protein-directed DCC.
The utilisation of proteins requires the DCC to work at physiological
conditions: pH, temperature and the nature of the reaction medium are three important
parameters that have to be taken into account. Two typical DCC reactions fulfilling
these conditions are the reversible imine and dithiol bond formations.
51
1.1.2.1.1. Imine bond formation
The use of imine bond formation in protein-directed DCC was first described by
Lehn and Huc in 1997 [125]. In their study, they generated a DCL composed of imines to
probe the active site of the enzyme Carbonic Anhydrase (CA), which is a drug target in
the treatment of various diseases including neurological disorders and osteoporosis. The
initial building blocks were composed of four amines and three aldehydes (Figure 1.22.)
and were selected so that all the DCL components had structural features in common with
known CA inhibitors. The functional groups creating the imine linkage had comparable
reactivity. All components could be detectable by HPLC.
Figure 1.22. Lehn and Huc’s imine DCL for CA inhibition.
NH3+
O
NH2
NH3+
O
HN
CO2-
NH3+
NH3+
HN
O
O
O
O
S
O-
OO
O
O-
O
O
S
NH2
OO
NH2+
S
NH2
OO
NH2+
S
NH2
OO
NH2+
S
NH2
OO
NH2+
S
NH2
OO
O
NH2
O
HN
CO2-
HN
O
O
NH2+
O-
O
NH2+
O-
O
NH2+
O-
O
NH2+
O-
O
O
NH2
NH2+
O
NH2
O
HN
CO2-
O
HN
CO2-
HN
O
O
HN
O
O
O
S
O-
OO
O
NH2+
S
O-
OO
O
NH2+
S
O-
OO
O
NH2+
S
O-
OO
a b c d
1
2
3
1a 1b 1c 1d
2a 2b 2c 2d
3a 3b 3c 3d
52
Amines were in excess to create pseudo-first order behaviour with respect to
the aldehydes, and to limit cross-reactivity between the aldehydes and any nucleophilic
amino acid residues on the protein surface. The use of NaBH3CN then converted the
imines into amines which are more stable and therefore easier to analyse by HPLC
(Figure 1.23.).
�
��
��
��
��
��
� � � � �����
�������� ������ ���� ��� ����� �� ��� � ���! ���� ��� �" � �!���
#� ��� ���� ���" "!� ! �" � ! ��� �$ "�������� "�%��� �% �����"���"��"
�� ���� "����� ��"�&���� � �!����% ����� ��
��'���
��'���
Figure 1.23. Reversible imine transamination reaction.
This experiment was the first proof of principle of DCC involving a biological
target. However, there are two major problems associated with the utilisation of imines:
first, because they are reduced to amines, imines are not represented in the final analysis;
there is also a side reaction where starting aldehydes are reduced to benzylic alcohols,
their concentration is therefore biased.
Lehn and co-workers also studied acylhydrazone formation (Figure 1.24.) as a
method for DCL generation for inhibition of acetylcholine esterase (ACE) [126], which
is a drug target in the treatment of glaucoma and Alzheimer’s. The use of acylhydrazone
formation in DCC in abiotic systems was introduced by Sanders and co-workers [127].
Figure 1.24. Reversible acyl hydrazone formation.
53
As the reaction takes place under conditions unsuitable for most enzymes and
ACE in particular, the DCL, composed of thirteen building blocks (aldehydes and
hydrazides, Figure 1.25.), was pre-equilibrated and frozen before ACE was added to the
solution. A deconvolution approach was developed to identify the best ACE inhibitor.
The pre-equilibrated 13-member DCL was frozen and assayed with ACE. Then, thirteen
sub-libraries were prepared containing all building blocks minus one hydrazide or one
aldehyde, frozen and assayed. The absence of the most active constituent would result in
an increase in ACE activity. In parallel, each library component was re-synthesised and
assayed individually. The results of these two experiments were in agreement, validating
the DCC technique. The same approach was also used by Lehn and co-workers in a
higher scale (440-member DCL) to identify a cationic inhibitor of a phosphotransfer
protein kinase from Bacillus subtilis [128].
Figure 1.25. Hydrazide and aldehyde components for acyl hydrazone DCL
Following this proof of concept, the reversible acylhydrazone formation was
applied to DCC by other groups, such as Eliseev and co-workers [129] and Beau and co-
workers [130-132] who used this technique to generate new enzyme inhibitors.
54
1.1.2.1.2. Disulfide bond exchange
The disulfide bond exchange reaction was introduced to DCC in the late 1990s
by Still, Sanders and Lehn in separate reports [133-135]. Given the fundamental role
played by disulfide formation and cleavage in biology, this reaction is highly compatible
with protein targets as disulfide exchange readily proceeds in water and at mildly basic
pH. Unlike imines, disulfide bonds are stable enough to undergo HPLC analyses and
isolation from aqueous solutions. For instance, Hunter and Waltho used disulfide
exchange in peptidic DCLs to target the calcium transducer calmodulin (CaM) [136].
The DCL building blocks were composed of cystine dimers containing hydrophobic
amino acid residues (Figure 1.26.) and the DCL was equilibrated for 48 hours. After
equilibration with CaM, one dimer was significantly amplified and revealed to be a
relatively good binder.
��
��
�
���
#
#
��� �
��
�
��
��
��
�
��
�
��
#
#
��
��
�
�
��
�
��
#
��
�
��
#
# #
� �
��
�
��
�
��
��
�
���
#
#
���
��
�
��
�
��
��
��
� �
���
#
#
��� �
��
���
��
Figure 1.26. Cystine dimer components for calmodulin DCL.
55
1.1.2.1.3. Enzymatic methods
Enzymes have been used to catalyse reversible reactions in DCC. They present
advantages such as being able to work within physiological conditions and can be
applied to a variety of C-C and C-X bond-forming reactions. For instance, thermolysin
was used in protease-catalysed amide-bond synthesis/hydrolysis [137-139].
Gleason and Kazlauskas introduced the concept of pseudo-dynamic
combinatorial chemistry by combining compartmentalised irreversible synthesis of
library with an irreversible destruction step [140, 141]. A pseudo-DCL of peptides was
used to inhibit CA. The system was consisted of two dialysis bags suspended in a
surrounding solution (Figure 1.27.). One of the bags was a synthesis chamber where
dipeptide binders were irreversibly created through addition of amino acids to
immobilised active esters. These dipeptides could diffuse to the solution – or screening
chamber – containing the targeted CA and where a binding equilibrium was established.
Dipeptides further diffused into the second dialysis tube – or destruction chamber –
where they were hydrolysed back to amino-acid building blocks which could migrate to
the synthesis chamber. After a number of cycles, this method proved to be highly
selective.
56
Figure 1.27. Enzymatic pseudo-DCL experiment.
1.1.2.2. Dynamic combinatorial chemistry and SjGST
In recent work by the Greaney and Campopiano groups, the 26 kDa GST from
S. japonicum has been used as a template in DCC [142]. The reaction was based on the
reversible conjugate addition of thiols to Michael acceptors, which is well suited for
biological DCL synthesis as it takes place in water at room temperature and under
mildly basic conditions [143]. Acidification easily switches the reaction off. A first DCL
was constructed with GSH, three GSH analogues modified on the γ-glutamyl moiety and
the Michael acceptor EA (Figure 1.28.). After one hour of equilibration, the library was
analysed and the four EA adducts could be characterised by LC-MS. Upon addition of
SjGST, the native substrate GS-EA conjugate (7) was highly amplified. Subsequent
12 k
Da
MW
CO
dia
lysi
s m
embr
ane
1 kD
a M
WC
O d
ialy
sis
mem
bran
e
X
HO2C NH2
X
HO2C NH2
X
HO2C NH2
NH
O F
F
F
F
O
N
R2
CO2Et
R1
X
HO2C NH
O
N
R2
CO2Et
R1
X
HO2C NH
O
N
R2
CO2Et
R1
X
HO2C NH
O
N
R2
CO2EtR1
HO
O
N
R2
CO2Et
R1
Pronase
1a X = SO2NH1b X = H
2a R1 = CH2Ph, R2 = H
2b R1 = R2 = H
2c R1 = CH2CH(CH3)2, R2 = H
2d R1 = R2 = (CH2)3
Carbonic anhydrasedipeptide complex
CA
Synthesis chamber Screening chamber Hydrolysis chamber
1 11
2
3 3 3
4
57
binding assays, giving IC50 values of 0.32 µM for 7 and 88 µM for 10, suggested a
correlation between the observed amplification and binding affinities of the DCL
components toward the enzyme.
Figure 1.28. Thiol conjugate addition DCL template by sjGST: (a) DCL without enzyme, (b) DCL after 10 minutes in the presence of SjGST, (c) DCL after equilibration and subsequent addition of the target, after 2 days, (d) the same system after 6 days.
The work was extended to a larger library constituted of GSH and fourteen EA
analogues (Figure 1.29.). In the presence of SjGST, three glutathione conjugates were
amplified (12a, 12m, 12n) as they exhibited the strongest binding affinities for the
enzyme. Both amplified GSH conjugates and their corresponding enone starting
materials were assayed for inhibitory activity against SjGST and showed slightly higher
IC50 values than GS-EA (IC50 = 0.32 µM).
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
58
Figure 1.29. Thiol conjugate addition DCL templated by SjGST: (a) DCL without enzyme, (b) SjGST template DCL. IC50 values for 12-a, b, f and n are indicated in bold. 1.1.3. Aims and research strategy
(a)
(b)
59
1.1.3. Aims and research strategy
The purification and biochemical characterization of the recombinant forms of
four potential drug target GSTs from human (hGST P1-1), mouse (mGST A4-4;
mGSTM1-1), and the parasitic worm S. japonicum (SjGST) were carried out prior to
their application in a DCL study. The reversible acyl hydrazone formation, in the
presence of aniline as nucleophilic catalyst, was used by Venugopal Bhat (University of
Edinburgh, laboratory of Dr. Mike Greaney) to generate a DCL based on the CDNB
scaffold in order to explore the active site of each purified GST. I consequently tested
the DCL members in inhibition and binding studies with SjGST and hGST P1-1, in an
attempt to correlate the amplification of a ligand and its affinity for the GST templating
its molecular recognition.
60
1.2. Results and Discussion
1.2.1. Structural comparison of the four glutathione transferase isoforms
The four GST genes from the plasmids in our possession (pGEX-6P-1-SjGST,
pET-15b-6His-mGSTM1, pET-15b-6His-hGSTP1 and pET-9a-mGSTA4) were all
sequenced and aligned with the protein sequence database. The GST from pGEX6P-1
was identical to the S. japonicum 26 kDa GST (UniProt accession number: P08515). The
two GSTs from the plasmids donated by Prof. John Hayes, University of Dundee – pET-
9a-mGSTA4 and pET-15b-6His-mGSTM1 – were similar to GST A4 (gene ID: 14860,
UniProt accession number: P24472) and GST M1 (gene ID: 14862, UniProt accession
number: P10642) respectively, both isolated from Mus musculus. The GST from the
plasmid given by Dr. Sylvie Blond – pET-15b-6His-hGSTP1 – corresponded to the
human GST P1 (gene ID: 2950, UniProt accession number: P09211). SjGST from the
commercial pGEX6P-1 plasmid contained an extra 26 amino acid sequence at the C-
terminus, corresponding to the pre-scission protease and multiple cloning sites allowing
the fusion of a protein. Analyses on the protein sequences revealed lengths varying
between 222 and 244 amino acids and molecular weights of 23 to 28.5 kDa (Table 1.2.).
Table 1.2. Lengths and molecular weight of the four forms of GST
Length (aa) Molecular weight (Da)
SjGST 244 28,428
His6-mGST M1 238 28,131
His6-hGST P1 232 25,759
mGST A4 222 25,574
61
The protein sequences were then compared pair wise and the percentage of
identity between each of them was determined. These data were incorporated into a
matrix represented in Figure 1.30.
SjGST mGST M1 mGST A4 hGST P1
SjGST 100 44.2 28.4 29.1
mGST M1 44.2 100 22.3 31.7
mGST A4 28.4 22.3 100 32.6
hGST P1 29.1 31.7 32.6 100
Figure 1.30. Matrix representing the percentage of identity between each isozyme. Alignments were made with LALNVIEW, using a BLOSUM62 matrix [144].
The four isoforms presented low sequence similarities (from 22% to 44% identity). It is
generally accepted that GSTs share greater than 40% identity within a class, and below
30% for GSTs belonging to different classes [53, 145, 146]; a low level of identity can
be expected between homologous enzymes that catalyse a wide range of reactions on
electrophilic substrates [146, 147]. Since SjGST is structurally very close to the mu class
enzymes, it was not surprising to find the highest percentage of identity (44%) between
SjGST and mGST M1-1 protein sequences [103, 104].
In order to identify the similarities between the GST isoforms, we aligned their ternary
spatial conformations. Since the 3D-structure of mGST M1-1 has never been solved, a
structural model was generated with the protein structure homology-modeling server
SWISS-MODEL [148, 149]. The analysis was based on the high protein sequence
resemblance with GST M1 from Rattus norvegicus (92.6% identity) [150], for which a
macromolecular structure was already available in the Protein Data Bank (PDB file
6GSV_A). The backbone conformations of the monomeric isoforms SjGST [102],
mGST M1, mGST A4 [151], and hGST P1 [152] were superimposed, and are illustrated
in Figure 1.31. As reported by Dirr et al.[56], we observed that the four spatial structures
follow a similar canonical fold despite a low sequence identity across the classes. Each
monomer consists of two distinct domains connected through a small peptide linker. The
62
N-terminal domain 1, which constitutes roughly one third of the protein, consists of four
β-sheets and three α-helices (βαβαββα), similar to that of the thioredoxin fold [54]. The
four β-sheets are essentially in the same plane, two helices (α1 and α3) are below this
plane and one (α2) is above it, exposed to the solvent. The C-terminal domain 2 is an all
α-helical domain, generally consisting of five α-helices [46, 53, 56].
Figure 1.31. Ternary structural alignment of hGSTP1, mGSTA4, SjGST and the structural model of mGSTM1 generated with SWISS-MODEL. β-sheets are coloured in yellow, α-helices in red, inter-specific region in green and the inter-domain linker peptide in violet. This Figure was generated using PyMOL.
A protein sequence alignment based on both sequence homology and structural
information was performed (Figure 1.32.). After highlighting the α-helices and β-sheets,
we observed that the regions corresponding to the secondary-structure elements in the
sequences of the GST enzymes could be aligned with confidence. Each subunit
polypeptide chain folds into two structurally distinct domains that have a total secondary
structure content of about 48-59% α-helix and 8-10% β-strands. The oligopeptide
linking the two domains is composed of seven residues. Dirr et al. reported a number of
26 invariant residues between the alpha, mu and the pi classes, all located around the
active site and mostly contributing to GSH binding, catalysis and conformational
stability [56]. Similarly here, 22 conserved residues and 37 homologous residues were
63
found in the four isoforms, giving an overall homology of about 25% between the four
sequences.
SjGST MSP--ILGYWKIKGLVQPTRLLLEYLEEKYEEHLYERD-----EGDKWRNKKFELGLEFP
hGSTP1-1 MPP-YTVVYFPVRGRCAALRMLLADQGQSWKEEVVT--------VETWQEGSLKASCLYG
mGSTA4-4 MAAKPKLYYFNGRGRMESIRWLLAAAGVEFEEEFLE-------TREQYEKMQKDGHLLFG
mGSTM1-1 MPM--ILGYWNVRGLTHPIRMLLEYTDSSYDEKRYTMGDAPDFDRSQWLNEKFKLGLDFP
: *: :* * ** : * : : :
β−1 α−1 β−2 extra mu-loop α−2
SjGST NLPYYIDGDVKLTQSMAIIRYIADKHNMLGGCPKERAEISMLEGAVLDIRYGVSRIAYSK
hGSTP1-1 QLPKFQDGDLTLYQSNTILRHLGRTLGLYGKDQQEAALVDMVNDGVEDLRCKYISLIYT-
mGSTA4-4 QVPLVEIDGMMLTQTRAILSYLAAKYNLYGKDLKERVRIDMYADGTQDLMMMIAVAPFKT
mGSTM1-1 NLPYLIDGSHKITQSNAILRYLARKHHLDGETEEERIRADIVENQVMDTRMQLIMLCYNP
::* : *: :*: :: : * :* : * :
β−3 β−4 α−3 linker peptide α−4
SjGST --DFETLKVDFLSKLPE-MLKMFEDRLC----HKTYLNGDHVTHPDFMLYDALDVVLYMD
hGSTP1-1 --NYEAGKDDYVKALPG-QLKPFETLLSQNQGGKTFIVGDQISFADYNLLDLLLIHEVLA
mGSTA4-4 PKEKEESYDLILSRAKTRYFPVFEKILKDH--GEAFLVGNQLSWADIQLLEAILMVEELS
mGSTM1-1 --DFEKQKPEFLKTIPE-KMKLYSEFLG----KRPWFAGDKVTYVDFLAYDILDQYRMFE
: * : : : * :: *:::: * : : :
α−5 α−6
SjGST PMCLDAFPKLVCFKKRIEAIPQIDKYLKSS-KYIAWPLQGWQATFGGGDHPPK
hGSTP1-1 PGCLDAFPLLSAYVGRLSARPKLKAFLASP-EYVNLPINGNGKQ---------
mGSTA4-4 APVLSDFPLLQAFKTRISNIPTIKKFLQPGSQRK-PPPDGPYVEVVRTVLKF-
mGSTM1-1 PKCLDAFPNLRDFLARFEGLKKISAYMKSS-RYIATPIFSKMAHWSNK-----
* ** * : *: : :: *
α−7 α−8 α−9
Figure 1.32. Alignment of topologically equivalent amino acid residues of the four GSTs. Catalytically active tyrosines are shown in red. Residues assigned to major secondary structure elements are underlined (beta strands) and squared (alpha helices). The seven-residue linker peptides are shown in grey. Invariant residues are indicated by an asterisk; residues with the same chemical properties are indicated by a double dot. α refers to an alpha helix and β to a beta strand. This alignment was generated with T-coffee [153].
Within the 22 conserved residues, three of them directly interact with GSH:
Tyr7 (Sj) / 8 (P1) / 9 (A4) / 7 (M1) activates GSH and stabilizes the thionate anion;
Gln66 (Sj) / 62 (P1) / 67 (A4) / 72 (M1) located between β−3 and α−3 and Asp100 (Sj) /
96(P1) / 101(A4) / 106(M1) both interact with the glutamyl moiety of GSH, their
mutation provokes a considerable decrease in activity and GSH affinity [56]. Gly12 (Sj)
/ 13 (P1) / 14 (A4) / 12 (M1) and Pro55 (Sj) / 53 (P1) / 56 (A4) / 61 (M1) are both
located in the active site and maintain a functional backbone conformation. Asp151 (Sj)
64
/ 152 (P1) / 157 (A4) / 157(M1) is located in α−6, in the hydrophobic pocket and plays a
role in protein stability. Five leucine residues are involved in the hydrophobic core at the
dimer interface: Leu19 (Sj) / 20 (P1) / 22 (A4) / 20 (M1); Leu20 (Sj) / 21 (P1) / 23 (A4)
/ 21 (M1); Leu136 (Sj) / 133 (P1) / 140 (A4) / 141(M1) makes Van der Waals contacts
with Leu169 (Sj) / 170 (P1) / 175 (A4) / 175 (M1) and Leu175 (Sj) / 176 (P1) / 181 (A4)
/ 181 (M1). The twelve remaining conserved residues all play essential roles in protein
conformation and stability.
Figure 1.33. Three-dimensional structures of individual GST subunits. Helices are coloured in red, β-strands in yellow. The linker regions connecting the two domains are shown in violet. The extra mu-loop in mGST M1 and α-9 in mGST A4 are represented in blue. Protein database codes and references are given between parentheses: (a) SjGST (1Y6E, [102]); (b) hGST P1 (1EOG, [152)]; (c) mGST M1; (d) mGST A4 (1GUK, [151]).
a b
c d
65
Despite the similarities between the protein sequences, comparing each
individual three-dimensional structure allowed us to point out some obvious differences
in their backbones (Figure 1.33.). Each of mGST M1-1 and mGST A4-4 presents a
unique structural feature, typical from the mu and the alpha class, respectively. M1-1 has
a characteristic “mu loop” which is located between β−2 and α−2. A4-4 N-terminus has
an extra α-helix (α−9), which packs on to the H-site. Both of these specific structural
elements are located close to the substrate binding sites and contribute to a more
constricted and less solvent-exposed active site of these two isoforms compared to the
other GSTs. SjGST contains a smaller version of the “mu loop” observed in mGST M1,
which is not long enough to cover the binding sites.
Differences in H-site topologies are correlated to the distinct substrate
specificities observed in the GST family. As well as structural characteristics, kinetic
properties constitute another important criterion in isozyme differentiation. I expressed,
purified and kinetically characterised the four isoforms, using the GST-universal CDNB
assay. A catalytically inactive mutant of SjGST – Y7F-SjGST – used later on as a
control in the DCC experiments carried out by Venughopal Bhat, was also generated and
characterised.
1.2.2. Glutathione transferase purification and characterization
1.2.2.1. Expression and purification
SjGST, mGST A4-4, His6-mGST M1-1 and His6-hGST P1-1 proteins were
expressed at 37°C in E. coli BL21 (DE3) host cells using prokaryotic expression vectors
pET or pGEX. After induction with isopropyl �-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) for 3
to 5 hours, an obvious increase in expression of the recombinant proteins of the expected
mass (~26 to 28 kDa) was observed using SDS-PAGE (Figure 1.34.).
The conserved Tyr7 active site residue is known to play a critical role in GSH
conjugation for SjGST, stabilizing the GSH thiolate anion through H-bonding from the
phenol group, with enzymes lacking this residue being catalytically inactive. I prepared
a SjGST Y7F mutant form, in which the crucial tyrosine residue is replaced with
66
97 kDa 66 kDa 45 kDa 30 kDa
20.1 kDa
14.4 kDa
phenylalanine. pGEX-6P1 was used as a template for mutagenesis and the mutation was
confirmed by DNA sequencing. Y7F SjGST was expressed in E. coli BL21 at 30˚C and
induced with IPTG for 5 to 6 hours (Figure 1.34.).
SjGST His6-mGST M1 His6-hGST P1 mGST A4 Y7F SjGST
M - + M + - M - + M - + M - +
Figure 1.34. SDS-PAGE showing expression of proteins from E. coli before (-) and after (+) induction with IPTG. From comparison with the marker (M) bands it is possible to see a large increase in the concentration of proteins of approximately 26 kDa.
All the plasmids, except pET9-a-mGST A4, contain a lacI gene so the
recombinant proteins from these vectors should only be expressed in the presence of
IPTG. The lac I repressor may not bind tightly enough to the lac O operator of pET15-b-
His6-mGST M1, allowing a slight expression of His6-mGST M1 without inducer.
Purifications of SjGST, mGST A4-4 and mutant Y7F SjGST were performed
by GSH affinity chromatography, using a 20 ml GSTPrep FF 16/10 column, followed by
a gel-filtration chromatography using a 320 ml Sephacryl S-200 column. Proteins with a
histidine tag – His6-hGST P1-1 and His6-mGST M1-1 – were isolated using a 5 ml
Nickel column and a 320 ml Superdex S200 size exclusion column. Cell free extracts,
affinity column flow-throughs (containing unbound proteins), washes and the eluted
fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE (Figures 1.35. to 1.39.). Specific activities were
measured at each purification step (Tables 1.3. to 1.6.). The catalytic activity of the
SjGST_Y7F mutant was also checked after purification and compared to the wild type
SjGST (Figure 1.40). Kinetic parameters of each purified GST are presented and
discussed in section 1.2.2.2.
67
Purification and characterization of SjGST
Figure 1.35. Elution profiles of sjGST from the GSTPrep column (A) and from the Sephacryl S-200 (B) showing the A280. Calibration markers are specified at the top of the gel filtration S-200 column UV trace, V0 is a void volume, VC is the column volume. Collected fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE (M: low molecular weight marker; E: cell free extract; F: flow through; W: wash; collected fractions are represented by their number).
Table 1.3. Purification of SjGST
Volume (ml)
Total protein (mg)
[Protein] (mg/ml)
Total activity (µmol/min/ml)
Specific activity (µmol/min/mg)
Yield (%)
Cell free extract 50 371 7.4 501.2 ± 59 67.7 ± 8 100
S-200 eluate 30 91 3 315.3 ± 51 105.1 ± 17 63
158
kDa
75 k
Da
43 k
Da
M E F W 7 10 13 18
30 kDa
M 13 14 15 11
V0 29 k
Da
13.7
kD
a
6.5
kDa
VC
A
B
30 kDa
68
Purification and characterization of mGST A4-4
Figure 1.34. Elution profiles of mGST A4-4 from the GSTPrep column (A) and from the Sephacryl S-200 column (B) showing the A280 and SDS-PAGE analyses of the collected fractions. Table 1.4. Purification of mGSTA4-4
Volume (ml)
Total protein (mg)
[Protein] (mg/ml)
Total activity (µmol/min/ml)
Specific activity (µmol/min/mg)
Yield (%)
Soluble cell lysate 50 295 5.9 20.3 ± 1.9 3.4 ± 0.3 100
S-200 eluate 30 23 0.8 11.9 ± 1.2 14.9 ± 1.5 59
M E F W 11 12 13 14 15 16
30 kDa
M 14 15 16
A
B
30 kDa
69
Purification and characterization of His6-mGST M1-1
Figure 1.37. Elution profiles of His6-mGST M1-1 from the Nickel column (A) and from the Sephacryl S-200 column (B) showing the A280 and SDS-PAGE analyses of the collected fractions.
Table 1.5. Purification of His6-mGST M1-1
Volume (ml)
Total protein (mg)
[Protein] (mg/ml)
Total activity (µmol/min/ml)
Specific activity (µmol/min/mg)
Yield (%)
Soluble cell lysate 50 278 5.6 58.9 ± 0.6 10.5 ± 0.1 100
S-200 eluate 40 61 1.5 40.8 ± 0.5 27.2 ± 0.3 69
M E F W 3 4 5 6
30 kDa
M 16 19 20 21 23 24 25 26
M 13 14 15 16
A
B
70
Purification and characterization of His6-hGST P1-1
Figure 1.38. Elution profiles of His6-hGST P1-1 from the Nickel column (A) and from the Sephacryl S-200 (B) showing the A280 and SDS-PAGE analyses of the collected fractions. Table 1.6. Purification of His6-hGST P1-1
Volume (ml)
Total protein (mg)
[Protein] (mg/ml)
Total activity (µmol/min/ml)
Specific activity (µmol/min/mg)
Yield (%)
Soluble cell lysate 50 284 5.7 353.1 ± 9.9 61.9 ± 1.7 100
S-200 eluate 40 76 1.9 260.9 ± 7.4 137.3 ± 3.9 74
M E F W 7 9 11 13 14 15
30 kDa
M 13 14 15 16 17
A
B
71
Time (s)
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400
[GS
-CD
NB
] (m
M)
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
0.30
0.35
0.40
0.45
SjGST Y7F (0.15 nM)
SjGST (0.15 nM)
Purification and characterization of Y7F SjGST
Figure 1.39. Elution profiles of Y7F from the GSTPrep column (A) and from the Sephacryl S-200 (B) showing the A280. The collected fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE. Figure 1.40. Comparative CDNB assays between SjGST WT and SjGST_Y7F, the mutant catalytic activity was reduced to 1.7%.
30 kDa
M E F W 5 6 7 8 9 10
M 14 15 16
SjGST_Y7F Specific Activity: 1.8 ± 0.1 µmol.min-1.mg-1
A
B
72
A yield of ~20 mg (mGST A4-4) to ~90 mg (SjGST) of recombinant protein
was generally obtained from three liters of E. coli BL21 (DE3) culture. The SjGST_Y7F
mutant was isolated in a yield of ~25 mg.
The five GSTs eluted as homodimers from the gel filtration column in
agreement with their predicted dimeric structures [103, 108, 151]. They were purified
with total recoveries of about 60 and 70% of the total activity using CDNB as a substrate
in a standard GST assay, for GSTs purified with GSH affinity chromatography (mGST
A4-4 and SjGST) and GSTs purified with Ni2+ affinity chromatography (His6-mGST
M1-1 and His6-hGST P1-1), respectively. In a previous study, Blond and co-workers
expressed the His6-hGST P1-1 using the same plasmid, the same E. coli strain and a
Co2+ affinity chromatography, with a total recovery of about 67% from the cell free
extract [154].
In order to identify the purity of each sample and to determine the mass of each
purified GST, ESI LC-MS analysis was carried out. A preliminary LC-MS of SjGST
after dialysis against 0.1 M KPhos buffer, pH 6.8 gave a result of 29,350 Da (Figure
1.41. A).
Figure 1.41. The mass spectrum of the purified sjGST. The ion envelope shows peaks ranging from 750 to 2000. The deconvoluted mass was determined using MassLynx.
Two ion series was observed in the spectrum, the first ion corresponds to the
theoretical mass (28,428 Da) of the monomeric protein bound to three molecules of
glutathione (3 x 307 Da). Another set of peaks (Figure 1.41. B) indicated a mass of
29,217 Da, which corresponds to the SjGST monomer lacking a methionine (132 Da).
This suggests that a part of the proteins had their N-terminal methionine cleaved during
73
their synthesis. In order to obtain a ligand-free protein, the sample was dialysed against
4 L of KH2PO4 buffer, containing 1.4 mM of �-mercaptoethanol allowing the disulfide
bonds to be reduced. LC-MS analysis of this sample gave results of 28,434 Da (Figure
1.42. A) and 28,303 Da (Figure 1.42. B) which are in agreement with the theoretical
masses of the monomer and the N-terminal truncated monomer respectively. Looking at
SjGST’s crystal structure, I found that each monomer possesses four cysteines (Cys83,
Cys135, Cys166 and Cys175) which are all solvent accessible [102]. These results
suggest that three of four cysteines can bind to GSH.
Figure 1.42. Mass spectrum of the purified SjGST after dialysis with KPhos buffer and β-mercaptoethanol. The ion envelope shows peaks ranging from 650 to 2000. The deconvoluted mass was determined using MassLynx.
mGST A4-4 does not contain any cysteine residues and therefore did not
require any reducing agent in the dialysis buffer. LC-MS analysis on mGST A4-4 gave a
result of 25,450 Da (Figure 1.43.), which is in agreement with the theoretical mass of the
monomer (25,445 Da).
74
Figure 1.43. Mass spectrum of the purified mGST A4-4. The ion envelope shows peaks ranging from 750 to 2000. The deconvoluted mass was determined using MassLynx.
His6-hGST P1-1 and His6-mGST M1-1 were dialysed against KPhos and
Tris/HCl buffers respectively, prior to MS analysis. A mass of 25,630.6 Da was obtained
for His6-hGST P1-1 and is in agreement with the calculated theoretical mass of 25,630
Da (Figure 1.44.). A MALDI-TOF analysis on His6-mGST M1-1 gave a major peak
with a mass of 28,130.47 m/z, which corresponds to the theoretical mass of 28,131 Da
(Figure 1.45.). A second peak, lower in intensity, was observed at 56,256 m/z and
matches with the theoretical mass of the dimeric form of His6-mGST M1-1 (56,262 Da).
Figure 1.44. LC ESI-MS spectrum of the purified His6-hGST P1-1. The ion envelope shows peaks ranging from 750 to 3000. The deconvoluted mass was determined using MassLynx.
Scan ES+ 25,630.60 Da
75
The purified mutant was dialysed against Tris/HCl (20 mM) prior to MALDI-
TOF mass spectrometry analyses. As for SjGST, β-mercaptoethanol was added to the
dialysis buffer to reduce any eventual disulfide bonds with GSH. The analysis gave a
mass of 28,410.54 m/z, corresponding to the theoretical mass of SjGST_Y7F (28,412
Da) (Figure 1.46.). A second peak with a mass of 56,821.94 m/z was observed and
corresponds to the dimeric form of the mutant (56,824 Da).
Figure 1.45. MALDI-TOF mass spectrum of the purified His6-mGST M1-1 from 20,000 to 65,000 m/z.
Figure 1.46. MALDI-TOF mass spectrum of the purified SjGST_Y7F from 20,000 to 65,000 m/z.
28,130.47 Da [His6-mGST M1+ H]
56,256.45 Da [2His6-mGST M1+ H]
28,410.54 Da [Y7F + H]
56,821.94 Da [2YF+ H]
76
1.2.2.2. Enzymatic analyses
Using the CDNB assay specific activities of each enzyme were obtained; 105.1,
14.9, 27.2 and 137.3 µmol/min/mg for SjGST, mGST A4-4, His6-mGST M1-1 and His6-
hGST P1-1 respectively. The data obtained for mGST A4-4 and His6-hGST P1-1 are
comparable to those found in the literature (12.2 and 130 µmol/min/mg respectively
[154, 155]). Specific activities for SjGST and His6-mGST M1-1 have not been reported
in the literature. However, a value of 26 µmol/min/mg has been published for the rat
GST M1-1 [74], which shares 92.6% sequence identity with mGST M1-1. Specific
activity of the mutant was found to be 1.8 µmol.min-1.mg-1, representing only 1.7% that
of the wild-type enzyme. In previous studies, García-Fuentes and co-workers generated
the same mutant and found a specific activity varying between 8 and 12 µmol.min-1.mg-1
and a kcat of 1.7% that of the wild type [156].
CDNB assays with variable concentrations of substrates (GSH: 1.0 µM to 2.0
mM; CDNB: 0.5 µM to 1.0 mM) were performed. Data were plotted with the software
SigmaPlot using the Michaelis-Menten, Lineweaver-Burk and Eadie-Hofstee equations
and kinetic parameters such as kcat and KM were determined. Similar results were
obtained with the three models; Michaelis-Menten plots are shown in Figures 1.47. and
1.48. Kinetic data are summarised in Table 1.7.
77
[GSH] (µM)
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500
Ra
te (
µm
ol/m
in/m
g)
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
[CDNB] (µM)
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200
Rate
(µ
mo
l/m
in/m
g)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
[GSH] (µM)
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
Rate
(µ
mol/m
in/m
g)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
[CDNB] (µM)
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
Ra
te (
µm
ol/m
in/m
g)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
[GSH] (µM)
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500
Ra
te (
µm
ol/m
in/m
g)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
[CDNB] (µM)
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200
Ra
te (
µm
ol/m
in/m
g)
0
20
40
60
80
100
Figure 1.47. Michaelis-Menten representation of mGST A4-4 (1), His6-mGST M1-1 (2) and His6-hGST P1-1 (3) activities towards the substrates GSH (a) and CDNB (b). GSH and CDNB concentrations were varied from 1 µM to 2 mM and 0.5 µM to 1 mM, respectively.
a)
a)
a)
b)
b)
b)
1
2
3
78
[GSH] (µM)
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
Ra
te (
µm
ol/m
in/m
g)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
[CDNB] (µM)
0 10 20 30 40
Rate
(µ
mo
l/m
in/m
g)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
Figure 1.48. Michaelis-Menten representation of SjGST (1) and SjGST_Y7F (2) activities towards the substrates GSH (a) and CDNB (b). GSH and CDNB concentrations were varied from 1 µM to 2 mM and 0.5 µM to 1 mM respectively when assaying SjGST and from 0.03 to 10 µM and 0.4 to 40 µM respectively when assaying the mutant.
Table 1.7. Kinetic parameters for mGST A4-4, His6-mGST M1-1, His6-hGST P1-1, SjGST and SjGST_Y7F.
KM
GSH (mM) KMCDNB (mM) kcat
CDNB (s-1) kcat/KMCDNB
(mM-1.s-1)
Specific Activity (µmol.min-1.mg-1)
mGST A4-4 0.49 +/- 0.03 4.67 +/- 0.55 6.3 +/- 0.6 1.3 14.9 +/- 1.5
His6-mGST M1-1 0.07 +/- 0.02 0.02 +/- 0.01 12.7 +/- 0.1 635 27.2 +/- 0.3
His6-hGST P1-1 0.20 +/- 0.02 0.81 +/- 0.04 59.3 +/- 1.6 69.5 137.3 +/- 3.9
SjGST 0.35 +/- 0.03 4.65 +/- 0.92 50.0 +/- 8.3 10.8 105.1 +/- 17.6
SjGST_Y7F 0.09 +/- 0.01 2.75 +/- 0.19 0.7 +/- 0.1 0.3 1.8 +/- 0.1
[CDNB] (µM)
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200
Ra
te (
µm
ol/m
in/m
g)
0
5
10
15
20
[GSH] (µM)
0 500 1000 1500 2000
Rate
(µ
mol/m
in/m
g)
0
20
40
60
80
100
a) b)
a) b)
1
2
79
The optimum conditions for the CDNB assays were obtained with a maximum
CDNB concentration of 1 mM in 2.5% ethanol. CDNB precipitates at higher
concentrations and a higher percentage of ethanol resulted in a decrease of the enzymes
activities. The same observation was made by Jakoby and co-workers who developed
the assay in 1974 [43]. Because of low solubility, the CDNB substrate concentration was
less than the KM when assaying SjGST and mGST A4-4. Therefore, the kinetic data are
less accurate for these two isozymes showing higher error values.
A general trend is observed for the GST isozymes SjGST, mGST A4-4 and
His6-hGST P1-1 – the enzymes display a higher affinity to GSH than to CDNB. This is
often seen with GSTs as their G-site is very well conserved and highly specific for GSH.
SjGST and mGST A4-4 have similar KM values regarding the two substrates.
Despite the fact that SjGST is most structurally similar to the mu class, it was found that
its H-site bears a higher similarity to that of A4-4 [103]. These features could explain
why these two enzymes have similar affinities for the same substrates.
His6-mGST M1-1 differs from the other GSTs presented here by its relatively
low affinity constants for both CDNB and GSH. By mutational experiments, Colman
and co-workers have proved that the mu loop present in the rat GST M1-1 plays a
crucial role in the specific recognition of CDNB [74]. Deletion of the loop substantially
decreased the enzyme’s affinity for the xenobiotic substrate by a 34-fold factor, giving a
KMCDNB value close to the human GST P1-1’s. SjGST, mGST A4-4 and His6-hGST P1-1
all lack this structural feature.
Roberts and co-workers have shown that the extra C-terminal alpha helix (α-9)
in hGST A1-1 is important for both binding and catalysis of CDNB, since its deletion
induced a 26-fold increase in KMCDNB and 160-fold decrease in kcat. Although A4-4
displays the same structural characteristic, it has been shown that this isoform is more
specific for lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) with a specific
activity 17 times higher for this substrate [157].
The relatively high affinity of His6-hGST P1-1 for CDNB is partly due to the
presence of an isoleucine in the H-site (I-105) [158], which creates a narrow active site
80
where the small substrate is accommodated. Mutation of this isoleucine to a valine
induced a 4-fold increase in KMCDNB.
Comparable KM values have been reported in the literature for SjGST (KMGSH =
0.43 mM, KMCDNB = 2.68; [159]), mGST A4-4 (KM
GSH = 0.48 mM, KMCDNB = 4.1 mM;
[160]), rGST M1-1 (KMGSH = 0.069 mM, KM
CDNB = 0.019 mM; [161]) and His6-hGST
P1-1(KMGSH = 0.13 mM, KM
CDNB = 0.86 mM; [154]).
The turnover number kcat represents the number of substrate molecules that are
converted to product per active site. In GSTs, nucleophilic aromatic substitution
reactions are rate-limited by the formation of the transition state and by product release.
For CDNB conjugation, the highest kcat values were found for His6-hGST P1-1 (59.3 s-1)
and SjGST (50.0 s-1) and were 5 to 10 times lower for His6-mGST M1-1 (12.7 s-1) and
mGST A4-4 (6.3 s-1). Similarly, Awasthi and co-workers found a kcat of 58.8 s-1 for
hGST P1-1 [162]; and Dirr and co-workers found a kcat of 18 s-1 for the rat GST M1-1
[163]. A slightly higher value was reported for mGST A4-4 (18.2 s-1) [160]. The close
proximity of the mu loop and alpha helix in mGST M1-1 and mGST A4-4 respectively,
is suggested to physically restrict the rate of product release from the active sites.
Furthermore, in mGST M1-1, Tyr115 located in α-4 has also been shown to play an
important role in catalysis. It seems that this residue interferes with product release
through hydrogen-bonding with Ser209. Mutation of Tyr115 into a Phe in the rat mGST
M1-1 resulted in a 3.6-fold increase in the turnover of CDNB [164].
The catalytic efficiency of an enzyme is determined by the ratio between the
rate of product release kcat and the dissociation constant KM between the enzyme and the
substrate. His6-mGST M1-1 showed the highest kcat/KM value for the GSH conjugation
of CDNB when compared to the three other isoforms, indicating that, for this class of
compound, the overall reaction is the most efficiently catalysed by His6-mGST M1-1.
Mutation of the catalytically active tyrosine 7 to a phenylalanine in SjGST
resulted in almost complete loss of activity toward CDNB substrate and a kcat that was
81
1.4 % than that of the wild type. These observations show the importance of Tyr7 for the
catalytic activity of this enzyme. The presence of the hydroxyl group of this tyrosine
does not seem fundamental for the binding of GSH, but it would stabilize the thiolate
group and give it the right orientation for the attack on the electrophilic substrate [165].
Moreover, the mutant protein showed higher affinity to GSH than the wild type.
This result is in agreement with those published in 2003 by Jara-Pérez and co-workers
[166] who studied the thermodynamics of GSH binding to the same mutant. They
proposed that SjGST has an additional water molecule in its G-site, forming a hydrogen
bond with Tyr 7 and which needs to be displaced upon GSH binding. Therefore, the
balance between the number of hydrogen bonds before and after substrate binding would
account for the favourable enthalpy upon binding of the mutant. This would explain the
enhanced affinity for the GSH substrate to SjGST_Y7F.
With each recombinant, purified GST isoform isolated in high yield and with
high catalytic activity we now proceeded to test the possibility of generating isoform-
specific GST inhibitors. Previously the promiscuity of the GST H-site made rational
design difficult. Protein-directed DCC provides a new method which presents the
advantage to not require any structural information on the enzyme. Venughopal Bhal
used a dynamic combinatorial approach to explore the active sites of the four isozymes.
82
1.2.3. Exploring glutathione transferase active sites
1.2.3.1. Glutathione transferase – templated dynamic combinatorial
chemistry
A first dynamic combinatorial library was generated by Venughopal Bhat,
based on acylhydrazone formation between an aldehyde having a CDNB scaffold and
ten commercially available hydrazides. The reversible imine formation was catalysed by
aniline, allowing the reaction to equilibrate rapidly at pH 6.2 [167]. Aniline functions as
a nucleophilic catalyst via the formation of a Schiff base which then reacts with a
hydrazone to yield an acyl hydrazone (Figure 1.49.). Without the aniline the equilibrium
was achieved very slowly. However, in its presence it was clear that all 10 members of
the DCL were observed by HPLC and mass spectrometry. Little of the initial aldehyde
was observed suggesting that it had been used up in DCL formation.
Figure 1.49. Two-step mechanism of the aniline-catalysed acyl hydrazone formation, starting from an aldehyde and a hydrazide, in acidic conditions (pH 6.2).
83
After verifying that SjGST retained catalytic activity in the presence of up to 20
mM of aniline, SjGST and His6-hGST P1-1 were targeted. The acylhydrazone DCL
presented in Figure 1.50. was interfaced with the two isozymes and amplification of a
particular peak corresponding was observed. Both DCLs demonstrated clear
amplification of hydrazone components; thiophene acylhydrazone 3g was selected by
SjGST and t-butylphenyl hydrazone 3c by His6-hGST P1-1 (Figure 1.51.). A control
experiment was made synthesising the same DCL in the presence of bovine serum
albumin (BSA) and produced no detectable amplification, indicating that GSTs
isozymes were responsible for library component amplification [194]. The pH of the
system was raised to 8.0 rapidly by addition of NaOH to stop the reaction and “fix” the
library.
��
#�
�
�
� �
�'��
#
�(�
(�(�
�
�
�
�
���
�
��
#
�
�(� �
)*'�����"�� ��
� +
�� �� �� ��
�� �� �� �
� ��
Figure 1.50. Aniline-catalysed acyl hydrazone formation. Conditions: Aldehyde (5 µM), hydrazides (20 µM) in NH4OAc Buffer (50 mM, pH 6.2) containing 15% DMSO. Library is run in the presence of aniline (20 mM).
84
Figure 1.51. HPLC analyses of GST-templated DCLs (254 nm). A, DCL hydrazone composition in the absence of any target (blank). B, When the DCL is constituted in the presence of SjGST, the thiophene hydrazone 3g is clearly amplified. C, Changing the target protein to hGSTP1-1 produces a different distribution, in which the t-butylphenyl derivative 3c is amplified. Targeted DCL conditions: GST (1 equiv.), aldehyde (5 µM), hydrazides (20 µM) and aniline (10 mM) in NH4OAc buffer (50 mM, pH 6.2) containing 15% DMSO for 16 h.
The amplified components were individually synthesised. I carried out some
inhibition assays against both GSTs with these compounds. However, due to their poor
solubility (< 10 µM), it was not possible to determine their IC50 values. To solve this
problem and simultaneously to increase the potency of the DCL components towards the
GSTs, Venughopal Bhat chemically conjugated GSH to aldehyde 1, generating a new
library composed of ten GS-conjugated hydrazones (Figure 1.52. A). We anticipated that
the highly soluble GSH tripeptide motif would act as an anchor at the G-site, enabling
exploration of the H-site with assorted hydrazide fragments. This approach, in which a
known enzyme–substrate interaction is used for inhibitor discovery, is well exemplified
in classical medicinal chemistry drug design, GST inhibition and DCC methods.
Venughopal Bhat tested the new library with the four isoforms: SjGST, His6-
hGST P1-1, His6-mGST M1-1 and mGST A4-4. Equilibration was complete in 6 hours
min20 22 24 26 28 30 32
mAU
0
5
10
15
20
25
min20 22 24 26 28 30 32
mAU
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
min20 22 24 26 28 30 32
mAU
0
2.5
5
7.5
10
12.5
15
17.5
20
Blank
SjGST
hGST P1-1
3d
3c
3j
3e
3g 3b
3f 3i
3h
3a
NO2
Cl
N
HN
O
S
NO2
Cl
N
HN
O
A
C
B
85
in the presence of aniline at pH 6.2. As before, clear shifts in equilibrium could be
observed for both SjGST and His6-hGST P1-1 targets: in each case the same hydrazide
fragment was selected as the best binder, thiophene (5g) for SjGST and t-butylphenyl
(5c) for His6-hGST P1-1 (Figure 1.52. B).
86
Figure 1.52. HPLC analyses of GST-templated DCLs of GSH conjugates. A, Acyl hydrazone DCL based on GSH-conjugated aldehyde 4 (GS-S-linked glutathione). B, DCL acyl hydrazone composition in the absence of target (blank), in the presence of SjGST and in the presence of hGSTP1-1. C, Changes in DCL component concentration for blank, SjGST and hGST P1-1 DCLs. The error bars represent the standard deviation over three experiments. IC50 values are indicated in grey for SjGST and in blue for hGST P1-1.
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
5a 5h 5i+5f 5b 5g 5e 5j 5d 5c
Hydrazone
% A
rea
Blank
Templated by SjGST
Templated by GSTP1-1
A
C
B
���18 20 22 24 26 28 30
���
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
���18 20 22 24 26 28 30
���
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
���18 20 22 24 26 28 30
���
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
Blank
SjGST
hGST P1-1
5a
5i + f
5b 5g 5e
5c
5h 5d 5j 2j
N
HN
O
NO2
GS
S
N
HN
O
NO2
GS
24 ± 1
119 ± 8
34 ± 1
84 ± 4
37 ± 1; 61 ± 3
40 ± 2
87 ± 3
22 ± 1
36 ± 2
25 ± 1 26 ± 1
57 ± 2
50 ± 3
87
Both components were amplified to over 300% of their concentration in the
blank DCL, at the expense of nearly all other competing hydrazones (Figure 1.52. C).
Additionaly, the anisyl sulphonylhydrazone 5j underwent ~100% amplification using
His6-hGST P1-1 as the only other positively selected component. The most significant
reductions in equilibrium concentrations occurred for 5b, f and i (SjGST) and 5f, g and i
(His6-hGST P1-1).
Interestingly, the presence of either mGST A4-4 or His6-mGST M1-1 with the
GS-conjugated DCL did not induce any amplification. It is known that these two
isozymes have a relatively narrow active site due to the presence of a mu loop (mGST
M1-1) or an alpha helix (mGST A4-4) on the top of it. Potentially, the ten hydrazides
present in the library may not be accommodated in the active sites. It is also possible that
the affinities of all the library members for these enzymes are so similar that no
selectivity could be detected. It would be of interest to try performing conjugation
experiments with GSH to find out whether the library components can bind to the active
sites of these two isoforms.
To verify the amplification results were not due to a kinetic selection by means
of target-accelerated synthesis, a control experiment in which GS-conjugated DCLs
were synthesised with the SjGST present from the beginning of the experiment was
performed. The same equilibrium distribution was achieved, with hydrazone 5g strongly
amplified, indicating that the amplified components are the result of genuine
thermodynamic selection. Further controls involved a BSA control experiment, which
was negative, and DCL synthesis in the presence of a large excess of the non-selective
GST inhibitor ethacrynic acid (EA) as discussed earlier. Component amplification was
completely suppressed for both SjGST and His6-hGST P1-1 DCLs, indicating that the
GST active site is saturated by the EA inhibitor and cannot influence the DCL
equilibrium composition.
I generated a catalytically inactive SjGST mutant to test whether a catalytically
inactive enzyme would exert the same control and selectivity on DCL composition as
the wild-type enzyme. Essentially zero activity was observed with this mutant in CDNB
conjugation when compared with the wild-type SjGST. However, SjGST Y7F proved
88
equally effective in controlling DCL composition, showing a clear preference for the
same thiophene derivative 5g as was amplified by the wild-type SjGST (Figure 1.53.).
This again provided evidence that the observed amplification was under thermodynamic
and not kinetic control.
���18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32
��
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
���18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32
��
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
Figure 1.53. HPLC analyses of GST-templated DCLs. A, DCL hydrazone composition in the absence of any target (blank). B, When the DCL is constituted in the presence of Y7F SjGST, the thiophene hydrazone 5g is clearly amplified.
1.2.3.2. Biological assays
I performed biological assays to establish whether the best binding compounds
in the GST-directed DCLs were also the best inhibitors of the SjGST and His6-hGST P1-
1 enzymes. To fully explore the isozyme-specific amplification effects of the two DCLs,
hydrazone conjugates 5a–5j were separately synthesized for study.
N
HN
O
NO2
GS
S
A
B
Blank
Y7F SjGST
89
1.2.3.2.1. Binding studies
I first confirmed that the amplified ligands 5c and 5g bound to SjGST and His6-
hGST P1-1 using isothermal calorimetry (ITC) and compared the thermodynamic results
with those of SjGST binding to the building block 1. ITC is a well-establish method
used to measure the stoichiometry (N), the dissociation constant (K), the enthalpy (∆H)
and the entropy (∆S) changes of a binding reaction. Typical experimental data, raw and
fitted, are given in Figures 1.54. and 1.55.; the thermodynamic parameters are tabulated
in Table 1.8. The interactions between the ligands and the enzymes are exothermic.
Analyses of the data yielded a binding affinity (Kd) of 5.8 µM for SjGST-5g, 6.5 µM for
SjGST-5c, 6.6 µM for His6-hGSTP1-1-5g, 3.8 µM for His6-hGSTP1-1-5c. The
conjugated aldehyde 1 bound to SjGST (41 µM) with an order of magnitude less than
compounds 5g and 5c, suggesting that the selected building blocks extend into a binding
pocket and improve the potency of inhibition.
90
Figure 1.54. ITC of SjGST (a and c) and His6-hGST P1-1 (b and d) in the presence and in the absence of 5c (c and d) and 5g (a and b). Top: Heats of injection of ~300 µM of ligand into a cell containing 10 �M of enzyme. Bottom: Data from the upper panel integrated and plotted as a function of the molar ratio of ligand after subtraction of heats generated by injection of ligand into buffer.
Molar Ratio kc
al/m
ole
of in
ject
ant
b
-4
-2
0
-10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Time (min)
µca
l/sec
-2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 -16 -14 -12 -10 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2
-1.0
-0.5
0.0
-10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Time (min)
µca
l/sec
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 -14 -12 -10
-8 -6 -4 -2 0
Molar Ratio
kcal
/mol
e of
inje
ctan
t
c
-2
-1
0
-10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Time (min)
µca
l/sec
-2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
-10 -8 -6 -4 -2 0
Molar Ratio
kcal
/mol
e of
inje
ctan
t d
a
-1.5
-1.0
-0.5
0.0
-10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Time (min)
µca
l/sec
-2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 -10
-8
-6
-4
-2
0
Molar Ratio
kcal
/mol
e of
inje
ctan
t
91
Figure 1.55. ITC of SjGST in the presence and in the absence of 1. Top: Heats of injection of 627 �M 1 into a cell containing 20 �M SjGST. Bottom: Data from the upper panel integrated and plotted as a function of the molar ratio of 1 after subtraction of heats generated by injection of 627 �M 1 into buffer.
The stoichiometry of binding of 1.7, 1.7, 2.6 and 1.9 respectively revealed there
are two ligands per dimer. The value greater than two for His6-hGSTP1-1-5g may be due
in part to other complexation species such as three molecules of ligand 5g binding to a
His6-hGSTP1-1 dimer.
Table 1.8. Experimental thermodynamic data for 5c, 5g and 1 binding to SjGST and His6-hGST P1-1, determined by ITC at 25 ˚C.
SjGST-5c SjGST-5g hGST P1-1-5c hGST P1-1-5g SjGST-1
Kd (µM) 6.5 ± 0.3 5.8 ± 0.5 3.8 ± 0.4 6.6 ± 1.0 41 ± 3.6
N (stoichiometry) 1.71 ± 0.03 1.71 ± 0.05 2.60 ± 0.06 1.90 ± 0.1 2.02 ± 0.2
∆H (kcal/mol) -11.4 ± 0.03 -16.9 ± 0.05 -16.9 ± 0.07 -13.4 ± 0.1 -5.0 ± 0.5
∆S (cal/mol) -14.4 -33.1 -31.8 -21.4 3.2
∆G (kcal/mol) -7.1 -7.0 -7.4 -6.4 -6.0
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0.0
0.2 -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Time (min)
µca
l/sec
0 2 4 6 8
-2
0
Molar Ratio
kcal
/mol
e of
inje
ctan
t
92
1.2.3.2.2. Inhibition studies
I studied the inhibitory activity of the ligands towards SjGST and His6-hGST
P1-1 using the CDNB conjugation assay. The IC50 data are tabulated in Table 1.9.
Table 1.9. IC50 data (µM)
The IC50 values were slightly higher for all hydrazones against His6-hGST P1-1
compared to SjGST (data ranging from 59 to 126 µM and 22 to 63 µM, respectively).
Although all the data were found in the same micromolar range, for each isozyme, the
DCC amplified hydrazone was the most active; thiophene 5g had the lowest IC50 value
(22 µM) among all the library members against SjGST, and t-butylphenyl 5c had the
lowest value among the four conjugates tested against His6-hGST P1-1 (57 µM). In
summary, the DCL hydrazone/GST selection process has successfully extended inhibitor
structure in the GST H-site, increasing potencies by sixfold for His6-hGST P1-1 (331 to
57 µM ) and by over tenfold for SjGST (279 to 22 µM) relative to the starting anchored
aldehyde 4.
Hydrazone sjGST hGST P1-1 4 279 ± 23 331 ± 20
5a 24 ± 1 ND
5b 40 ± 2 ND
5c 50 ± 3 57 ± 2
5d 26 ± 1 ND
5e 36 ± 2 ND
5f 61 ± 3 ND
5g 22 ± 1 87 ± 3
5h 34 ± 1 119 ± 8
5i 37 ± 1 84 ± 4
5j 25 ± 1 ND
93
Steady-state kinetic studies on the two amplified DCL components 5c (His6-
hGST P1-1) and 5g (SjGST) confirmed the expected competitive inhibition profile, with
both compounds binding to the GST active sites. The inhibition data for SjGST and P1-1
are plotted in Figures 1.56. and 1.57. respectively. The Ki data are presented in Table
1.10., along with the corresponding Km and IC50 values. Firstly, we found that the Ki
values were very close to the binding constants Kd determined previously by ITC and
were well correlated to the IC50 data according to the Cheng-Prusoff equation: Ki =
IC50/(1+[S]/Km), where the Ki can be estimated as IC50 = 4Ki for inhibitors which are
competitive with both substrates [168].
Table 1.10. Ki data (µM)
Secondly, it was interesting to note slightly higher Ki values for both
compounds when assayed against CDNB, a substrate for the H-site of the enzyme,
relative to the endogenous G-site ligand GSH. The affinity of the two hydrazone
conjugates towards both GST G-sites was relatively close (data ranging from 5.25 to
7.19 µM), as would be expected for two compounds sharing a common GSH-tagged
nitrobenzene fragment.
His6-hGST P1-1 SjGST
CDNB GSH CDNB GSH
Km (mM) 0.81 ± 0.04 0.20 ± 0.01 4.65 ± 0.92 0.35 ± 0.02
Ki5g (µM) 13.96 ± 0.78 7.19 ± 0.42 12.82 ± 0.68 5.25 ± 0.23
Ki5c (µM) 10.66 ± 0.67 6.61 ± 0.42 18.58 ± 1.05 6.33 ± 0.27
IC505g (µM) 87 ± 3 22 ± 1
IC505c (µM) 57 ± 2 50 ± 3
94
Figure 1.56. Inhibition of SjGST by 5g using GSH and CDNB as substrates. The IC50 value is the concentration of inhibitor giving 50% inhibition of enzyme activity. Data are the mean ± standard deviation of triplicate experiments.
Figure 1.57. Inhibition of hGSTP1-1 by 5c using GSH and CDNB as substrates.
[5g] (µM)0 50 100 150 200
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50 = 22.0 µM
1/[GSH] (mM)
-20 0 20 40 60 80
1/v
(µ
mo
l/m
in/m
g)
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
80
100I = 0
I = 2.5
I = 7.4
I = 22.2
I = 66.7
I = 200
Ki5g = 5.3 µM
1/[CDNB] (mM)
-20 0 20 40 60
1/v
(µ
mol/m
in/m
g)
-40
0
40
80
120
160I = 0
I = 2.5
I = 7.4
I = 22.2
I = 66.7
I = 200
Ki5g = 12.8 µM
[5c] (µM)0 200 400 600 800 1000
% inh
ibitio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50 = 57.3 µM
1/[CDNB] (mM)
-20 0 20 40 60
1/v
(µ
mo
l/m
in/m
g)
-2
0
2
4
6I = 0
I = 2.5
I = 7.4
I = 22.2
I = 66.7
I = 200
Ki5c = 10.7 µM
1/[GSH] (mM)
-20 -10 0 10 20 30 40
1/v
(µ
mol/m
in/m
g)
-1.0
-0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0 I = 0
I = 2.5
I = 7.4
I = 22.2
I = 66.7
I = 200
Ki5c = 6.6 µM
95
1.2.3.3. Structural insights into the dynamic combinatorial library
amplification mechanism
1.2.3.3.1. Docking studies
To obtain some molecular insight into the selectivity of our GST isozymes
towards the two hydrazone inhibitors 5c and g, I carried out a molecular modeling study
with the collaboration of Dr. Ruth Brenk and Dr. Torsten Luksch (Dundee University).
In a first experiment, the available GST structures were surveyed in the protein data
bank (PDB) sharing more than 40% sequence identity to the target SjGST crystal
structure (1M9A). 38 structures were retreived that contained a bound, GSH-based
ligand. The binding sites of these structures, together with the bound ligands, were
aligned, and as expected, it became evident that the GSH portions overlaid well, being
bound in very similar conformations in the G-sites (Figure 1.58. a). In contrast, the
conjugate parts of the various ligands showed great diversity in their conformations
within the H-site, an unsurprising result given the respective functions of the G- and H-
sites. Detailed analysis of the superimposed crystal structures identified the GSH
conjugate of 1,2-epoxy-3-(p-nitrophenoxy)propane (EPNP) bound to cGST M1-1 (PDB
code 1C72) [169] as the ligand that projected functionality into the H-site with the most
similar geometry to the energy-minimized structure of hydrazone 5g (Figure 1.58. b).
96
Figure 1.58. GST ligands. a, Superposition of a selection of GST ligands from the PDB. b, Conformation of the GST-bound EPNP as found in the crystal structure of cGST M1-1 (PDB code 1C72, green carbon atoms), relative to the energy-minimized structure of compound 5g (pink carbon atoms).
Analysis of the GST–EPNP complex shows the EPNP moiety orienting towards
R107 and Q165 in the H-site of the enzyme (Figure 1.59. C). The side chains of R107,
F110, Q165, Q166 and F208 define the pocket that confines the EPNP moiety.
On this basis, I could generate a binding model for SjGST with thiophene
hydrazone 5g and for His6-hGST P1-1 with t-butyl hydrazone 5c (Figure 1.59. A and B).
The interactions in the generated binding modes for SjGST in complex with 5g and for
His6-hGST P1-1 in complex with 5c between the glutathione moiety and the proteins are
identical to those reported in previous publications [103, 108]. The hydrazone group of
5g is predicted forms hydrogen bonds to R103 and Q204 in SjGST, and equivalent
interactions are observed for 5c in complex with His6-hGST P1-1. Residue V161 in
SjGST and I161 in His6-hGST P1-1 make hydrophobic interactions in our models with
the ligands 5c and 5g. As expected, the sub-pockets of both isoforms accommodating the
hydrazones are rather hydrophobic, and complement the hydrophobic hydrazones
amplified from the DCL. The thiophene hydrazone fits easily in the SjGST binding
pocket, with only minor side-chain adjustments necessary (RMSD 0.3 Å between model
a b
97
and crystal structure template), whereas the t-butylphenyl group would lead to a steric
clash and would require some degree of induced fit in order to bind. Induced fit is also
required to accommodate this ligand in the His6-hGST P1-1 pocket, but in that case the
binding mode could be stabilized by additional lipophilic interactions of the t-butyl
group with Y103, H162 and I161. It is worth noting that Chern and colleagues have
reported that mutations in that region of the H-site had a great impact on EPNP binding,
with mutation of cGST M1-1 Q165 to leucine (V161 in SjGST and I161 in hGST P1-1)
reducing kcatEPNP by 59%, although Km showed only small changes [169]. Because the
amino acids in the equivalent pocket of SjGST and His6-hGST P1-1 are not highly
conserved, these residues have such a great influence on ligand binding that it is likely
that these amino-acid exchanges across the isoforms are critical in determining ligand
selectivity.
98
Figure 1.59. Molecular modeling of amplified DCL components with the GST active site. A, Model of 5g bound to SjGST. B, Model of 5c bound to His6-hGST P1-1. The binding pocket surfaces are shown in light blue and key amino acids as blue sticks. The ligands are represented in salmon pink, with atoms coloured by type. Hydrogen bonds of the conjugated ligand parts are shown as yellow dotted lines. C, The EPNP–cGST M1-1 crystal structure (PDB code 1C72). The binding pocket surface is shown in raspberry pink and key amino acids as red sticks. The ligand is represented in green, with atoms coloured by type. Hydrogen bonds of the conjugated ligand parts are shown as yellow dotted lines.
A B
C
99
1.2.3.3.2. Importance of the heteroatom in SjGST selection of a five-
membered heterocycle
Looking back at the library members, we observed that compound 5f,
containing an oxozole ring, was fairly similar to the thiophene hydrazone 5g selected by
SjGST. Since the chemical groups of 5g involved in the predicted interactions with
SjGST are the secondary amine of the hydrazone bond, the ketone common to all the
library members and C4 of the thiophene ring, we noticed that the same types of
interactions could occur with 5f and consequently it was surprising that this compound
had not been amplified at all.
1.2.3.3.2.1. Generation of a 3-member dynamic combinatorial library
To study the importance of the heteroatom in the five-membered heterocycle,
Venugopal Bhat generated a new library composed of the GSH conjugated aldehyde 4,
the compounds 2f, 2g and another acyl hydrazone containing a pyrrole ring 2k (Figure
1.60. A). Nitrogen has an intermediate size and electronegativity between oxygen and
sulfur. The new DCL was equilibrated in the absence and in the presence of SjGST. The
three peaks corresponding to 5k, 5f and 5g were clearly identified (Figure 1.60. B).
After 16 hours with the target protein, a distinct amplification of around 50% was
observed again for the same thiophene compound 5g. Both 5k and 5f decreased by 55
and 50% respectively. In the acyl hydrazone 5k, the proton bound to the nitrogen may
form a hydrogen bond with the oxygen of the ketone, making this molecule more rigid
and preventing interactions with R103 and Q204 in SjGST’s hydrophobic pocket.
Therefore binding of this compound would be less favoured among the three ligands.
However, amplification of 5g over 5k cannot yet be explained with the current data.
100
Figure 1.60. HPLC analyses of GST-templated DCL of GSH conjugates. A, 3-membered acyl hydrazone DCL based on GSH-conjugated aldehyde 4. B, DCL acyl hydrazone composition in the absence of target (blank) and in the presence of SjGST. Percentages of peak areas are specified above each peak. 1.2.3.3.2.2. NMR studies
The structures of the five-membered heterocycle acyl hydrazones were
examined by NMR. In order to simplify the NMR analyses and since we were interested
in the hydrazone moiety, I analysed the non-conjugated compounds 3f and 3g from the
first generated library. 1H NMR spectra were firstly run for both compounds in DMSO
at 25, 30, 35, 40 and 60˚C. The spectrum of 3f (Figure 1.61.) remained unchanged with
A
28.3 ± 0.4 % 20.8 ± 0.5 %
50.9 ± 0.2 %
12.8 ± 0.3 % 10.3 ± 0.5 %
76.9 ± 0.4 %
5g 5k 5f
N
HN
O
S
NO2
GS
5f
5g
5k
Blank
SjGST
B
HN
OO
OS
O
101
the increase in temperature. Whereas from 25 to 40˚C, proton peaks were too broad and
coupling constants could not be determined from the 3g spectrum (Figure 1.62. A). At
60˚C, the peaks became sharper allowing for determination of coupling constants
(Figure 1.62. B), suggesting a faster rotation around the N-N bond. H7 proton was
influenced most heavily by the bond delocalisation, as upon inter-conversion at higher
temperature, both H7 peaks merge into an average peak hidden in the right shoulder of
the peak of H3. Considering the broad peaks of H7 and H6 observed in the spectrum of
3f, it is likely that the same dynamics occur at room temperature. The higher
electronegativity of the oxygen atom may withdraw some of the electrons before the
C=N-N delocalised system, allowing an easier rotation around the N-N bond.
Unfortunately, 1H NMR could not be run at lower temperature due the high melting
point of DMSO. I suggest that 3g may adopt a conformation more favourable to allow
the thiophene ring to be accommodated within the SjGST hydrophobic pocket.
Figure 1.61. 1H NMR of 3f at room temperature
Cl
NO2
N
HN
O
O
102
Figure 1.62. A, Superposition of 3g 1H NMR spectra at room temperature (top) and at 60˚C (bottom); B, Peak determination of the spectrum at 60˚C.
Currently, there are more in-depth NMR studies underway on compound 3k to
gain some insights into SjGST’s selectivity.
�����
�����
�����
�����
����
�����
�����
����
1H NMR spectrum of 3g at 25˚C
1H NMR spectrum of 3g at 60˚C
A
B
Cl
NO2
NN
O
S
H7 H8
H1
H2
H3
H4
H5H6
103
1.3. Conclusions
GST enzymes are currently targeted in the development of new drugs against
several important diseases such as cancer and schistosomiasis. In cancer therapy, they
are mostly responsible for drug resistance in many cancer tissues, which often show
elevated levels of theses enzymes compared to normal tissues. Many cancers also show
different distribution of GST isozymes compared to those seen in healthy tissues.
Therefore, elaboration of isoform-specific GST inhibitors would provide tumor-directed
drugs and potentiate conventional chemotherapeutic agents.
DCC was used as a new tool to explore the promiscuous H sites of various GST
isoforms. The GST enzyme proved effective as a DCL template, with two isozymes
from the GST family smoothly integrating with the small molecule assemblies and
strongly amplifying the best binding components. The selected hydrazones showed
increased inhibitory activity of over one order of magnitude from the starting GSH-
tagged nitro-benzaldehyde 4, validating the approach in the context of protein–ligand
discovery. Interestingly, a single, small DCL composed of only ten members displayed
isozyme selectivity according to which variant of the GST enzyme is used as the
template. To gain insight into isoform selectivity, I found that each amplified molecule
could be effectively docked into its respective GST H-site, although the fine structural
features of the SjGST versus hGST P1-1 H-site that discriminate between thiophene
hydrazone 5g and t-butylphenyl hydrazone 5c are unclear at the present time. Structural
determination of the various GST:GS–hydrazone conjugates will be needed for a deeper
understanding of the factors that control H-site selectivity.
104
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Chapter 2: Probing the active site of a bacterial
glutathione transferase using dynamic combinatorial chemistry
115
2.1. Introduction
2.1.1. Bacterial glutathione transferases
Bacterial GSTs have been studied since GST activity was reported in
Escherichia coli in 1981 [1]. Since then, four different bacterial GST classes have
been identified: Beta, Chi, Theta and Zeta. Most of them show poor catalytic activity
and low specificity towards GST substrates such as CDNB. It has been proposed that
these GSTs were not primarily involved in detoxification but were rather involved in
primary metabolism. Their function may have changed during the course of
evolution [1, 2, 3].
Bacterial theta class GSTs share high sequence similarity with eukaryotic
theta class GSTs and the same properties. They are represented by dichloromethane
(DCM) dehydrogenases which catalyse the glutathione dependant conversion of
DCM to formaldehyde and allow facultative methylotrophic bacteria to use DCM as
a carbon source. A tetrachlorohydroquinone (TCHQ) dehalogenase has been
reported as belonging to the zeta class, based on amino-acid sequence alignments.
This enzyme is involved in the degradation of pentachlorophenol and has isomerase
activity like the eukaryotic zeta class GSTs. Beta-class GSTs have been isolated
from several bacteria and are unusual in that they have two catalytic cysteine
residues in their G-site. They are able to bind GSH-affinity matrices and they can
conjugate GSH to CDNB. In contrast a new GST class called ‘Chi’ was isolated
recently from cyanobacteria and they lack the two cysteine residues in their active
site [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6].
2.1.2. The beta-class glutathione transferase BphK
The bacterial GST BphK (Figure 2.1.) was expressed from a gene found in
the genome of the species Burkholderia xenovorans LB400. This species is an
environmental strain that was first isolated from a landfill site in the USA known to
116
contain a large concentration of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) [7, 8]. It has a
remarkable ability to detoxify PCBs, via the detoxification pathway known as the
Bph pathway, which it then proceeds to use as a carbon source. The Bph pathway
consists of a number of enzymes that catabolise PCBs. B. xenovorans’ ability to
detoxify PCBs has been of great importance to the research community as a
potential candidate for microbial degradation of pollutants [9].
The Bph pathway is coded by the Bph operon in the genome of B.
xenovorans. This operon consists of a cluster of genes that code for enzymes that
perform the various stages of the biphenyl catabolism eventually leading to the
production of acetyl-CoA. When the Bph operon was characterised in detail the
unexpected presence of a gene (bphK) coding for the GST enzyme mentioned above
was observed. Although its function was unclear it was found not to be essential for
growth of the bacteria on biphenyls [10].
Figure 2.1. Crystal structure of BphK from B. xenovorans (PDB 2GDR): a) homodimer (one subunit in grey, the other in orange) in complex with three molecules of GSH (shown in pink); b) active site residues (in green) interacting with the two molecules of GSH [157].
Subsequent studies have proposed that this GST may be responsible for the
dechlorination of the chlorinated 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenyl-2,4-dienoate (HOPDA)
metabolites of the PCB catabolic pathway (Figure 2.2.) [11, 12, 13]. In the proposed
two-step mechanism for BphK’s function, two molecules of GSH are required. In
the first half of the reaction, 3Cl-HOPDA is dechlorinated. In the second half, the
Glu65
Ser10
Glu10
His10
Cys10
Trp16
Phe11
Ser11
a) b)
117
catalytically active cysteine (Cys10) and the molecule of GSH used in the first step
are regenerated.
Figure 2.2. Proposed mechanism for the dehalogenation of 3-Cl HOPDA by BphK [15].
Subsequent searches on genomes of other bacteria resulted in the discovery
of GST proteins with high sequence identity to that of BphK. Many bacteria of the
genus Burkholderia, Pseudomonas and Sphingomonas have been shown to have
proteins sharing sequence identity to the BphK GST [15]. B. cenocepacia belongs to
the Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) which is used to describe some nine
species of the genus Burkholderia. Members of the Bcc are known to exist in the
environment and are also pathogens of both humans and plants. They are most
notorious as pathogens in sufferers of cystic fibrosis (CF) where they are
opportunistic colonisers of the patient’s lungs [14].
118
The J2315 strain of the ET-12 lineage of Burkholderia cenocepacia was
isolated from the lungs of CF patients. It is a known member of the Bcc and has
spread among patients in Edinburgh, Scotland and Toronto, Canada during an
epidemic outbreak in the 1990’s. As well as being able to survive in the CF lung
B.cenocepacia inhabits the rhizosphere and has an impressive ability to detoxify
hostile environments [14]. Studies have shown that the J2315 strain of B.
cenocepacia, is capable of surviving murine macrophages, where a mechanism is in
place that delays the maturation of phagosomes [15]. This ability to escape host
cell’s fundamental immune responses along with J2315’s known occurrence in CF
patients lungs shows conclusively that is has a very impressive detoxification
system.
2.1.3. Aims and research strategy
BphK isolated from B. xenovorans is one of the most extensively
investigated bacterial glutathione transferase for bioremediation since it is capable of
degrading a broad spectrum of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). It has an
interesting mechanism of reaction which differs from the other GSTs by using two
molecules of GSH instead of one.
A bacterial strain from the same genus as B. xenovorans, B. cenocepacia
J2315 can infect CF patients and is resistant to antibiotics. As a detoxification and
PCB degrading enzyme, BphK from J2315 may be partly responsible for the
bacteria’s resistance to a highly hostile environment. Therefore, the aims of this
project were to:
- search the genome of B. cenocepacia J2315 for a gene similar to the BphK gene
found in B. xenovrans;
- isolate the gene from J2315;
- express the new GST protein;
- characterise the activity of the BphK_J2315 protein with a CDNB assay;
- probe the enzyme active site with a DCC approach.
119
2.2. Results and Discussion
2.2.1. BphK_J2315 isolation and purification
The BphK protein sequence from B. xenovorans strain LB400 was used to
search the genome of B. cenocepacia for a similar translated sequences and a match
of 45% identity was observed with the translated gene BCAM0431. Importantly, the
active site residues were conserved and the C-terminal motif Ser/Thr-Xaa-Xaa-Asp
common to all GSTs from PCB degrading operons was present (Figure 2.3.). Site-
directed mutagenesis of this motif in LB400 BphK affected GST activity towards the
substrates CDNB and 4-chlorobenzoate (4-CBA) [16].
10 20 30 40 50 60
BphK MKLYYSPGACSLSPHIALREAGLNFELVQVDLASKKTASGQDYLEINPAGYVPCLQLDDG
::::..::.:: . :.:::: .. :.:.:: .. . .:.:: ..: :::: :.::::
BphK_J MKLYHAPGSCSQAICIVLREADIDAEIVKVDARKHVVDGGRDYYDVNELGYVPLLELDDG
10 20 30 40 50 60
70 80 90 100 110 120
BphK RTLTEGPAIVQYVADQVPGKQLAPANGSFERYHLQQWLNFISSELHKSFSPLFNPASSDE
: :::.:.::.:::.: :::: :.. ::.:..::::...:.::.: ::. ... .
BphK_J TLLREGPVIAQYLADQLPEAALAPAYGTLARYRLMEWLNFLGTEIHKGFIPLLYAVQAGK
70 80 90 100 110 120
130 140 150 160 170
BphK WKNAVRQSLNTRLGQVARQLEHAPYLLGDQLSVADIYLFVVLGW-------SAY-VNIDL
. . :::.:. :.. . :::. .: :: ..::: :::.. :: :.: ..:::
BphK_J YVEPVRQKLDGRFAWIDRQLDGRTFLTGDTFTVADAYLFALTGWGKADWMRSVYNADIDL
130 140 150 160 170 180
180 190 200
BphK SPWPSLQAFQGRVGGREAVQSALRAEGLIK
: :.:. :: : :::..: :..:..
BphK_J SRHAHLRAWYERVRERPAVQAVLAADNLLR
190 200 210
Figure 2.3. Alignment of the protein sequences of BphK from B. xenovorans (BphK) with the translation of the gene BCAM0431 from B. cenocepacia J2315 (BphK_J). Alignment was made with LALIGN and gave 45.2% of identity between the two sequences. The conserved catalytic residues are shown in red; the conserved C-terminal motif is highlighted in yellow.
120
97 kDa 66 kDa 45 kDa 30 kDa 20.1 kDa 14.4 kDa
The gene was isolated from the B. cenocepacia J2315 genome, sequenced,
and cloned into the expression plasmid pET22b as described in section 5.2.4.9.5.
The protein of 23769 Da was named BphK_J2315 and expressed in E. coli BL21
(DE3) at 37 ˚C. After 3 hours of induction with IPTG, a clear expression of the
protein could be observed by SDS-PAGE analysis (Figure 2.4.).
M - +
Figure 2.4. SDS-PAGE showing expression of BphK_J2315 from E. coli before (-) and after (+) induction with IPTG. From comparison with the marker (M) bands it is possible to see a large increase in the concentration of proteins of approximately 24 kDa.
Purification of BphK_J2315 was performed by affinity chromatography,
using a 20 ml GSTPrep FF 16/10 column (Figure 2.5.), followed by size exclusion
chromatography using a 360 ml Superdex S200 column (Figure 2.6.). Specific
activities were measured at each purification step, using a CDNB assay.
121
Purification and characterization of BphK_J2315
Figure 2.5. Elution profile of BphK_J2315 from the GSTPrep column showing the A280. The collected fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE (M: low molecular weight marker; E: cell free extract; F: flow through; W: wash; collected fractions are represented by their number).
Figure 2.6. Elution profile of BphK_J2315 from the Sephacryl S-200 column showing the A280. Calibration markers are specified at the top of the S-200 UV trace, V0 is a void volume, VC is the column volume. Collected fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE (M: low molecular weight marker). Table 2.1. Purification of BphK_J2315
Volume (ml)
Total protein (mg)
[Protein] (mg/ml)
Total activity (µmol/min/ml)
Specific activity (µmol/min/mg)
Yield (%)
Cell free extract 50 336 6.7 16.8 ± 1.8 2.5 ± 0.3 100
S-200 eluate 40 104 2.6 11.4 ± 1.2 4.4 ± 0.5 68
M E F W 6 9 12 15 18 21
30 kDa
M 15 16 17 18
V0 158
kDa
75 k
Da
43 k
Da
29 k
Da
13.7
kD
a
6.5
kDa
VC
30 kDa
122
A yield of ~ 100 mg of recombinant protein was obtained from 3 liters of E.
coli BL21(DE3) culture. The molecular mass of native BphK_J2315 was estimated
to be 40 kDa by calibrated gel filtration chromatography, which is close to the
dimeric molecular mass of ~ 47.5 kDa. Murphy and co-workers purified BphK from
Burkholderia xenovorans strain LB400 with a glutathione affinity resin and
determined a mass of approximately 33.9 kDa for the native enzyme.
Crystallographic analyses revealed that the enzyme is dimeric [11]. BphK_J2315
was purified to its complete homogeneity with a total recovery of 68 % of the total
activity using the CDNB assay. The specific activity of the purified enzyme towards
the reporter substrate CDNB, 4.4 µmol/min/mg, was 1.8-fold higher than that of the
raw extract. A similar specific activity of 7.4 µmol/min/mg was found for BphK
from Burkholderia xenovorans strain LB400 [13].
In order to estimate the purity of the sample eluted from the gel filtration
column and to determine the mass of the purified GST, MALDI-TOF MS analysis
was carried on after dialysis against a 20 mM Tris/HCl buffer. Two major fused
peaks of 23,761.68 and 24,076.09 m/z were observed (Figure 2.7.). The first peak
corresponds to the BphK_J2315 monomer which has a theoretical mass of 23,769
Da. The second peak has an additional 314 Da which is relatively close to the mass
of glutathione (307 Da). Since BphK is known to have a catalytically active cysteine
in its active site which binds GSH covalently, we can assume that this peak
corresponds to BphK_J2315 bound to one molecule of glutathione. This hypothesis
is verified by the appearance of a third peak at 48,145.13 m/z, matching with the
molecular weight of the dimeric form of BphK_J2315 (47,538 Da) plus two
molecules of GSH (614 Da).
123
Figure 2.7. MALDI-TOF mass spectrum of BphK_J2315 from 20,000 to 65,000 m/z.
Steady-state kinetics with variable concentrations of substrates (GSH: 1.0
µM to 2.0 mM; CDNB: 0.5 µM to 1.0 mM) were performed. Data were plotted
using the Michaelis-Menten and Lineweaver-Burk equations, and kinetic parameters
such as kcat and KM were determined for each substrate. kcat was calculated using the
monomeric molecular weight. The same results were obtained with the two models;
Michaelis-Menten plots are shown in Figure 2.8. and kinetic data are summarised in
Table 2.1.
48,145.13 Da [2 Bphk_J2315 + 2GSH + H]
23,761.68 Da [BphK_J2315 + H]
24,076.09 Da [BphK_J2315 + GSH + H]
124
Figure 2.8. Michaelis-Menten representation of BphK_J2315 activity towards the substrates GSH (A) and CDNB (B). GSH and CDNB concentrations were varied from 1 µM to 2 mM and 0.5 µM to 1 mM, respectively. Table 2.1. Kinetic parameters of BphK_J2315
KM (mM) Vmax (µmol/min/mg) kcat (s-1) kcat/KM (mM-1.s-1)
GSH 0.42 ± 0.03 2.92 ± 0.31 1.15 ± 0.12 2.74
CDNB 1.40 ± 0.23 4.43 ± 0.49 1.75 ± 0.19 1.25
KM and kcat for BphK from B. xenovorans has not been reported in the
literature. However, similar data were obtained for another beta class GST from
Proteus mirabilis, GST B1-1, which has KM values of 0.69 and 0.73 mM and kcat of
0.97 and 1.16 towards GSH and CDNB respectively [17].
Since BphK_J2315 was able to conjugate GSH to CDNB, we decided to
probe its active site using the CDNB-based DCL described earlier in Chapter 1.
[CDNB] (µM)
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200
Rate
(µ
mol/m
in/m
g)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
[GSH] (µM)
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500
Rate
(µ
mol/m
in/m
g)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
A B
125
2.2.2. Exploration of BphK_J2315’s active site using DCC
Venughopal Bhat interfaced the glutathione-conjugated 10-membered
library presented in Figure 2.9. with the enzyme for 16h and measured the
amplifications (Figure 2.10.).
��
#�
�
�
� �
�'��
#
�(�
(�(�
�
�
�
�
���
�
��
#
�
(�� �
)*'�����"�� ��
� +
�� �� �� ��
�� �� �� �
� �� Figure 2.9. Aniline-catalysed acyl hydrazone formation. Conditions: Aldehyde (5 µM), hydrazides (20 µM) in NH4OAc Buffer (50 mM, pH 6.2) containing 15% DMSO. Library A is run in the presence of aniline (20mM).
126
Figure 2.10. HPLC analyses of BphK_J2315-templated DCL of GSH conjugates. A, DCL acyl hydrazone composition in the absence of target (blank) and in the presence of BphK_J2315. DCL conditions: GST (1 equiv.), aldehyde (5 µM), hydrazides (20 µM) and aniline (10 mM) in NH4OAc buffer (50 mM, pH 6.2) containing 15% DMSO for 16 h. B, Changes in DCL component concentration for blank and BphK_J2315 DCLs.
The ten peaks corresponding to the 10 hydrazones were identified in both
the blank and the GST-templated DCLs. Three compounds 5b, 5e and 5c were found
to be amplified. The strongest increase in peak area was observed for hydrazone 5b
5a
5h 5i+f
5b
5g
5e 5j 5d 5c
2j
2e
GS
NO2
N
HN
O
A
B
127
which was amplified to almost 200% as compared to 5e (~20%) and 5c (~15%). The
seven remaining members decreased in proportion. The three selected ligands are all
hydrophobic. The hydrazone 5b shares some structural features with the well-known
substrate of BphK, HOPDA (Figure 2.11.). In particular, both molecules are planar
and have a benzene ring at one extremity. Murphy and co-workers have crystallised
BphK from LB400 in complex with glutathione and HOPDA [11]. These structures
revealed the presence of a solvent-exposed H-site, where the benzene ring of
HOPDA makes hydrophobic contacts with Trp164, Tyr167 and Phe113. These three
residues are conserved in BphK_J2315. Therefore, one can hypothesise that the
benzene ring of 5b is accommodated in the corresponding hydrophobic pocket of
BphK_J2315. Similarly, 5e and 5c, which also have hydrophobic aromatic rings,
may be able to bind to the same region with a lower affinity.
Figure 2.11. Structure of HOPDA (a) and 5b (b).
a
b
128
2.3. Conclusions
A BphK enzyme was isolated from the B. cenocepacia genome, expressed
in E. coli and purified using glutathione-affinity chromatography. Kinetic
parameters were determined and were comparable to the data found for some other
bacterial beta class GSTs. They also showed that BphK_J2315 is able to conjugate
CDNB to glutathione. The enzyme successfully amplified three hydrazones from the
glutathione-conjugated DCL. The highest amplified member was found to share
some structural features with a known substrate of BphK and could possibly bind to
a hydrophobic pocket located in the active site of the enzyme. Although these results
strengthen the credibility of the use of DCC as a tool in drug discovery, structural
analyses of the complex BphK:5b/5e/5c as well as inhibition studies remain to be
done to provide insight into the protein/ligand interactions involved and a rationale
for the observed selectivity.
129
2.4. Chapter 2 references
1. Shishido, T., Glutathione S-Transferase from Escherichia coli. Agriculture
Biological Chemistry, 1981. 45(12): p. 2951-2953. 2. Vuilleumier, S., Bacterial glutathione S-transferases: what are they good for? J
Bacteriol, 1997. 179(5): p. 1431-41. 3. Vuilleumier, S. and M. Pagni, The elusive roles of bacterial glutathione S-
transferases: new lessons from genomes. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol, 2002. 58(2): p. 138-46.
4. Allocati, N., et al., Glutathione transferases in bacteria. FEBS J, 2009. 276(1): p. 58-75.
5. Sheehan, D., et al., Structure, function and evolution of glutathione transferases:
implications for classification of non-mammalian members of an ancient enzyme
superfamily. Biochem J, 2001. 360(Pt 1): p. 1-16. 6. Wiktelius, E. and G. Stenberg, Novel class of glutathione transferases from
cyanobacteria exhibit high catalytic activities towards naturally occurring
isothiocyanates. Biochem J, 2007. 406(1): p. 115-23. 7. Goris, J., et al., Classification of the biphenyl- and polychlorinated biphenyl-
degrading strain LB400T and relatives as Burkholderia xenovorans sp. nov. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol, 2004. 54(Pt 5): p. 1677-81.
8. Hofer, B., S. Backhaus, and K.N. Timmis, The biphenyl/polychlorinated biphenyl-
degradation locus (bph) of Pseudomonas sp. LB400 encodes four additional
metabolic enzymes. Gene, 1994. 144(1): p. 9-16. 9. Pieper, D.H. and M. Seeger, Bacterial metabolism of polychlorinated biphenyls. J
Mol Microbiol Biotechnol, 2008. 15(2-3): p. 121-38. 10. Bartels, F., et al., Occurrence and expression of glutathione-S-transferase-encoding
bphK genes in Burkholderia sp. strain LB400 and other biphenyl-utilizing bacteria. Microbiology, 1999. 145 ( Pt 10): p. 2821-34.
11. Tocheva, E.I., et al., Structures of ternary complexes of BphK, a bacterial
glutathione S-transferase that reductively dechlorinates polychlorinated biphenyl
metabolites. J Biol Chem, 2006. 281(41): p. 30933-40. 12. Gilmartin, N., et al., BphK shows dechlorination activity against 4-chlorobenzoate,
an end product of bph-promoted degradation of PCBs. FEMS Microbiol Lett, 2003. 222(2): p. 251-5.
13. Fortin, P.D., et al., A glutathione S-transferase catalyzes the dehalogenation of
inhibitory metabolites of polychlorinated biphenyls. J Bacteriol, 2006. 188(12): p. 4424-30.
14. Mahenthiralingam, E., T.A. Urban, and J.B. Goldberg, The multifarious,
multireplicon Burkholderia cepacia complex. Nat Rev Microbiol, 2005. 3(2): p. 144-56.
15. Lamothe, J., et al., Intracellular survival of Burkholderia cenocepacia in
macrophages is associated with a delay in the maturation of bacteria-containing
vacuoles. Cell Microbiol, 2007. 9(1): p. 40-53.
130
16. Gilmartin, N., D. Ryan, and D.N. Dowling, Analysis of the C-terminal domain of
Burkholderia sp. strain LB400 BphK reveals a conserved motif that affects catalytic
activity. FEMS Microbiol Lett, 2005. 249(1): p. 23-30. 17. Perito, B., et al., Molecular cloning and overexpression of a glutathione transferase
gene from Proteus mirabilis. Biochem J, 1996. 318 ( Pt 1): p. 157-62.
131
Chapter 3: Preliminary work on the exploration of a
glutathione transferase-homolog using dynamic combinatorial chemistry
132
3.1. Introduction
3.1.1. Eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1Bγ (eEF1Bγ) from
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Protein biosynthesis is divided into three phases: initiation, elongation and
termination. During initiation, a Met-tRNAiMet is based paired with a starting AUG
codon of an mRNA within the ribosome. In the elongation phase, one amino-acid
is added at a time to a growing polypeptide; the ribosome selects the
aminoacylated-tRNA (aa-tRNA) according to the sequence of codons in the
mRNA. This process is assisted by several protein elongation factors. In
eukaryotes, aa-tRNAs are brought to the ribosome by eukaryotic elongation factor
1A (eEF1A), in the form of a ternary complex aa-tRNA-eEF1A-GTP. Upon
cognate recognition, GTP is hydrolysed to GDP and eEF1A leaves the ribosome.
Finally, nucleotide exchange of eEF1A is catalysed by the eukaryotic elongation
factor 1B (eEF1B), so that inactive eEF1A-GDP is converted into active eEF1A-
GTP which can then bring another aa-tRNA to the ribosome [1].
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, eEF1B contains three subunits, α, β and γ.
The last two interact with each other through their N-termini [2]. α and β are the
catalytic subunits in the guanine exchange process [3]. eEF1Bγ has been shown to
bind tubulin [4], the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum [5] and mRNA [6]
and is therefore thought to play a role in directing the protein synthetic apparatus
towards cytoplasmic structures in the cell. Two eEF1Bγ isoforms, Tef3p and
Tef4p, have been isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae [7]. Although its
function is still unclear, Tef3p has been identified as a calcium-dependant
membrane binding protein and as a gene dosage suppressor of a 40S ribosomal
subunit assembly mutant [8]. It is also suspected to play a role in the oxidative
stress pathway [9] and in the regulation of expression of methionine sulfoxide
reductase [10].
133
Valencia and co-workers have shown by computational methods that the
N-terminal domain of eEF1Bγ has sequence motifs characteristic to the theta class
GSTs [11]. GST activity has been detected in rice eEF1Bγ [12] and a related
trypanothione transferase activity has been ascribed to eEF1Bγ from the protozoa
Leishmania major [13]. Yeast eEF1Bγ consists of two structural domains
connected by a flexible peptide linker [2, 3]. The C-terminal domain 2 is
monomeric and does not interact with eEF1Bα. The structure of the N-terminus of
Tef3p from S. cerevisiae has been solved by Jeppesen et al. [3] and revealed a clear
structural conservation to GST (Figure 3.1.). Since the full-length Tef3p tends to
aggregate at physiological conditions, they constructed two deletion mutants, based
on trypsin digestion and sequence alignment with the human theta class GST T2-2
sequence. The two resulting recombinant fragments, domain 1 (1-219 residues) and
domain 1’ (1-242 residues) respectively, had both sequence homology with GST
and were highly soluble. Interestingly, domain 1 was found to be monomeric,
whereas domain 1’ was purified as a dimer, suggesting that residues 220-242 were
required for dimerisation.
Figure 3.1. A, the eEF1Bγ domain 1 monomer viewed from the dimer interface side. The N-terminal subdomain 1N containing the sulphate ion is shown in purple, the C-terminal subdomain 1C in yellow, the extra-helix between α-6 and α-7 is shown in red. B, the human GST T2-2 monomer with GSH shown in pink bound in the active site [60]. Helices α-8 and α-9, shown in green, encapsulate the active site.
A B
SO4
134
Only the crystal structure of domain 1 could be solved. Similar to other
GST structures, domain 1 consists of 2 sub-domains connected by a short peptide
linker with sub-domain 1N adopting a topology similar to a thioredoxin fold and
sub-domain 1C containing a hydrophobic core created by interactions between the
aromatic rings of Trp99, Phe143, Phe169, Phe173, Trp181, Trp191, and Phe192.
Compared to the human GST T2-2 structure, there is an additional helix between
α-6 and α-7 similar to that found in the Arabidopsis thaliana GST theta class
structure. Domain 1 crystallised as a dimer, showing mainly hydrophobic and polar
interactions between the two monomers, including a hydrophobic ‘lock and key’
motif described for mammalian GST structures. In the putative active site, several
conserved residues involved in GSH binding were identified and a potential
catalytic Tyr7, although orientated away from the active site, was pointed out.
Despite these observations, domain 1 did not bind to GSH affinity resin nor did it
show any activity towards CDNB in vitro [3].
It has been suggested that domain 1’ of eEF1Bγ mediates the dimerisation
of the eEF1 complex. Based on high sequence identity after alignment with other
eEF1Bγ isoforms, an interaction site with eEF1Bα has been proposed to be located
close to the putative GST active site. A communication may then occur between
the exchange activity and the putative GST activity of eEF1Bγ. Moreover, it has
been suggested that eEF1Bβ could interact with the loop located between α-2 and
β-2, which would alternatively become part of the GST active site, giving it more
flexibility and allowing substrate binding and catalysis. Although Tef3p did not
show any GST activity towards CDNB, catalytic activity with a more specific
secondary substrate was not excluded.
135
3.1.2. Aims and research strategy
eEF1Bγ is a protein homologous to GSTs, likely active, for which a
potential secondary substrate remains to be characterised. Since its putative active
site shares common structural features with CDNB-conjugating GSTs, the DCL
created by Venugopal Bhat, based on the CDNB scaffold, was used to probe the
“H-site” binding pocket in the hope of identifying an amplified ligand. Moreover,
finding a ligand for the longer domain 1’ could help for a more qualitative
crystallisation of the dimer.
136
97 kDa 66 kDa 45 kDa 30 kDa 20.1 kDa 14.4 kDa
97 kDa 66 kDa 45 kDa 30 kDa 20.1 kDa 14.4 kDa
3.2. Results and Discussion
3.2.1. Expression and purification
Genes coding for domain 1 and domain 1’ were both cloned in pET11-d by
Dr. Andersen and co-workers and both contained an N-terminal 6-histidine tag [3].
The resulting theoretical molecular weights of the tagged proteins were 24,876.65
Da for domain 1 and 28,042.26 Da for the longer domain 1’. Plasmids were named
pTKB588 and pTKB611 respectively.
The two proteins were expressed at 37 °C in E. coli BL21 (DE) host cells,
using the expression vectors pTKB588 and pTKB611. After induction with IPTG
for 5 hours, an increase in expression of the recombinant proteins of the expected
masses (~25 and 28 kDa) was observed by SDS-PAGE analysis (Figure 3.2.).
Figure 3.2. SDS-PAGE gels showing expression of proteins from E. coli before (-) and after (+) induction with IPTG. From comparison with the marker (M) bands it is possible to see increase in the concentration of proteins of approximately 25 and 28 kDa.
Domains 1 and 1’ were purified using a nickel column, followed by gel
filtration chromatography, a 120 ml Superdex S-75 column and a 360 ml Sephacryl
S-200 column were used respectively. Cell free extracts, affinity columns flow-
throughs (containing unbound proteins) and washes, and the collected fractions
were used for SDS-PAGE analysis (Figures 3.3. and 3.4.).
Domain 1 M - +
Domain 1’ M + -
137
Purification of domain 1
Figure 3.3. Elution profiles of domain 1 from the Ni column (A) and from the Superdex S-75 (B) showing the A280. Calibration markers are specified at the top of the S-75 UV trace, V0 is a void volume, VC is the column volume. Collected fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE (M: low molecular weight marker; E: cell free extract; F: flow through; W: wash; collected fractions are represented by their number).
M E F W 3 5 7 9 12 15
30 kDa
V0 75 k
Da
43 k
Da
29 k
Da
13.7
kD
a
6.5
kDa
VC
M 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
30 kDa
138
Purification of domain 1’
Figure 3.4. Elution profiles of domain 1’ from the Ni column (A) and from the Sephacryl S-200 (B) showing the A280. Calibration markers are specified at the top of the S-200 UV trace, V0 is a void volume, VC is the column volume. Collected fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE.
M E F W 16 17 18 19
30 kDa
M 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
30 kDa
V0 75 k
Da
43 k
Da
29 k
Da
13.7
kD
a
6.5
kDa
VC 158
kDa
139
UV-vis traces from the nickel columns showed large amounts of protein
contaminants eluting from fraction 1 to fraction 12 in both purifications. Nickel is
the most widely available metal ion for purifying histidine-tagged protein and
generally provides good binding efficiency but also tends to bind non-specifically
to endogenous proteins that contain histidine clusters. Jeppesen et al. used a cobalt
resin to purify the same two proteins. Cobalt exhibits a more specific interaction
with histidine-tags, resulting in a less non-specific interaction.
The molecular masses of the native proteins were estimated to be 25 kDa
for domain 1 and 55 kDa for domain 1’ by calibrated gel filtration
chromatography, indicating that domain 1 is monomeric (theoretical mass of
24,876.65 Da) and domain 1’ is dimeric (56,084 Da). A yield of ~ 40 µg was
obtained for domain 1, which was not enough material for LC ESI-MS analysis
and for protein directed DCC. Therefore, my work focused on domain 1’ for which
a yield of ~ 1 mg per litre of cell culture was obtained.
Eluted fractions from the Sephacryl S-200 containing domain 1’ (F14 and
15) were pooled and dialysed against a 20 mM Tris/HCl buffer prior to analysis by
MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The resulting spectrum is presented in figure 3.4.
A fused peak showing two masses of 27,914.12 Da and 28,044.60 Da was
observed. The first mass corresponded to the theoretical mass of domain 1’ without
one methionine plus one proton (27,912 Da), the second mass to domain 1’ plus
one proton (28,043 Da). These data suggest that a part of the proteins had their N-
terminal methionine cleaved by E. coli during their synthesis. A third peak of
56,086.20 Da was relatively close to the dimeric theoretical molecular weight of
domain 1’ plus one proton (56,089 Da).
140
Figure 3.4. MALDI-TOF mass spectrum of domain 1’ from 20,000 to 65,000 m/z. 3.2.2. Probing domain 1’ using dynamic combinatorial chemistry
The glutathione-conjugated 10-membered library described in chapters 1
and 2 was used to probe domain 1’. Venugopal Bhat interfaced the DCL with the
protein for 16h and compared the acyl hydrazone composition with that of the
same DCL in the absence of the target protein, in order to identify any
amplification (Figure 3.5.).
56,086.20 Da [2Domain 1’ + H]
27,914.12 Da [Domain 1’ – Met + H]
28,044.60 Da [Domain 1’ + H]
141
Figure 3.5. HPLC analyses of Domain 1’-templated DCL of GSH conjugates; DCL acyl hydrazone composition in the absence of target (blank) and in the presence of Domain 1’. DCL conditions: Domain 1’ (1 equiv.), aldehyde (5 µM), hydrazides (20 µM) and aniline (10 mM) in NH4OAc buffer (50 mM, pH 6.2) containing 15% DMSO for 16 h.
By comparing the two UV traces from the HPLC analyses, we observed
that all the peaks remained unchanged in both chromatograms. Therefore, the
presence of domain 1’ did not promote any change in the library composition.
Since CDNB is not a substrate for eEF1Bγ, it is possible that none of the members
were able to bind the protein. Binding studies such as isothermal calorimetry will
be necessary to confirm these results.
Since the putative GST active site of domain 1’ resembles that of the
human GST T2-2, I searched for the literature-known substrates for this enzyme in
order to be able to design a more appropriate library for domain 1’. Interestingly,
hGST T2-2 does not have any activity towards CDNB and does not bind to
glutathione-affinity resins either [14, 15]. Although it has a low affinity for GSH
(KM ~ 0.8 mM), hGST T2-2 is able to activate the tripeptide with an efficiency
similar to that of other mammalian GSTs [16, 17]. Moreover, it has been shown
that hGST T2-2 presents a sulfatase activity, through GSH conjugation, towards
5a
5h 5i+f
5b
5g
5e 5j 5d
5c
2j 2e
Blank
Domain 1’
142
various carcinogenic sulfate esters and in particular to 1-menaphthyl-sulfate (MSu)
[14, 18]. Similar to the hGST T2-2 crystal structure, a sulfate ion has been found
bound in the putative active site of domain 1, suggesting the possibility of a
sulfatase activity [3, 18]. Considering this information, one could imagine probing
domain 1’ with a new library based on the MSu scaffold (Figure 3.6. A). For
instance, a DCL could be developed based on the commercially available
substrate-like 2-naphthaldehyde (Figure 3.6. B).
Figure 3.6. Structures of 1-menaphtyl sulfate (A) and 2-naphtaldehyde (B)
A B
O
H
�
# ��
�'
143
3.3. Conclusions
The N-terminal part of eEF1Bγ from S. cerevisiae is a GST-like protein for
which no biological function has been assigned so far. Two truncated forms from this
region, the monomeric domain 1 and the dimeric domain 1’, have been purified using a
nickel resin. However, the yields obtained for the two proteins were relatively low and
the method needs to be improved. Domain 1’ did not influence the CDNB-based DCL
composition and is possibly unlikely to bind any CDNB derivative. A potential
substrate for this protein was suggested, and a structurally similar commercially
available aldehyde has been found to be a good candidate for the generation of a new
DCL, which may be able to probe the N-terminal domain of eEF1Bγ.
144
3.4. Chapter 3 references
1. W.C. Merrick, J.N., Translational control of gene expression, ed. J.W.B.H. Nahum Sonenberg, Michael B. Mathews. 2000, New York: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
2. Vanwetswinkel, S., et al., Solution structure of the 162 residue C-terminal domain of
human elongation factor 1Bgamma. J Biol Chem, 2003. 278(44): p. 43443-51. 3. Jeppesen, M.G., et al., The crystal structure of the glutathione S-transferase-like
domain of elongation factor 1Bgamma from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem, 2003. 278(47): p. 47190-8.
4. Janssen, G.M. and W. Moller, Elongation factor 1 beta gamma from Artemia.
Purification and properties of its subunits. Eur J Biochem, 1988. 171(1-2): p. 119-29. 5. Sanders, J., et al., Immunofluorescence studies of human fibroblasts demonstrate the
presence of the complex of elongation factor-1 beta gamma delta in the endoplasmic
reticulum. J Cell Sci, 1996. 109 ( Pt 5): p. 1113-7. 6. Al-Maghrebi, M., et al., The 3' untranslated region of human vimentin mRNA interacts
with protein complexes containing eEF-1gamma and HAX-1. Nucleic Acids Res, 2002. 30(23): p. 5017-28.
7. Kinzy, T.G., T.L. Ripmaster, and J.L. Woolford, Jr., Multiple genes encode the
translation elongation factor EF-1 gamma in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Nucleic Acids Res, 1994. 22(13): p. 2703-7.
8. Ripmaster, T.L., G.P. Vaughn, and J.L. Woolford, Jr., DRS1 to DRS7, novel genes
required for ribosome assembly and function in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell Biol, 1993. 13(12): p. 7901-12.
9. Olarewaju, O., et al., The translation elongation factor eEF1B plays a role in the
oxidative stress response pathway. RNA Biol, 2004. 1(2): p. 89-94. 10. Hanbauer, I., E.S. Boja, and J. Moskovitz, A homologue of elongation factor 1 gamma
regulates methionine sulfoxide reductase A gene expression in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 2003. 100(14): p. 8199-204. 11. Koonin, E.V., et al., Eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1 gamma contains a
glutathione transferase domain--study of a diverse, ancient protein superfamily using
motif search and structural modeling. Protein Sci, 1994. 3(11): p. 2045-54. 12. Kobayashi, S., S. Kidou, and S. Ejiri, Detection and characterization of glutathione S-
transferase activity in rice EF-1betabeta'gamma and EF-1gamma expressed in
Escherichia coli. Biochem Biophys Res Commun, 2001. 288(3): p. 509-14. 13. Vickers, T.J., S. Wyllie, and A.H. Fairlamb, Leishmania major elongation factor 1B
complex has trypanothione S-transferase and peroxidase activity. J Biol Chem, 2004. 279(47): p. 49003-9.
14. Rossjohn, J., et al., Human theta class glutathione transferase: the crystal structure
reveals a sulfate-binding pocket within a buried active site. Structure, 1998. 6(3): p. 309-22.
15. Flanagan, J.U., et al., Mutagenic analysis of conserved arginine residues in and around
the novel sulfate binding pocket of the human Theta class glutathione transferase T2-2. Protein Sci, 1999. 8(10): p. 2205-12.
145
16. Hussey, A.J. and J.D. Hayes, Characterization of a human class-Theta glutathione S-
transferase with activity towards 1-menaphthyl sulphate. Biochem J, 1992. 286 ( Pt 3): p. 929-35.
17. Caccuri, A.M., et al., Human glutathione transferase T2-2 discloses some evolutionary
strategies for optimization of substrate binding to the active site of glutathione
transferases. J Biol Chem, 2001. 276(8): p. 5427-31. 18. Jemth, P. and B. Mannervik, Active site serine promotes stabilization of the reactive
glutathione thiolate in rat glutathione transferase T2-2. Evidence against proposed
sulfatase activity of the corresponding human enzyme. J Biol Chem, 2000. 275(12): p. 8618-24.
146
Chapter 4: Biotechnological applications of glutathione
transferases with quantum dots
147
4.1. Introduction
4.1.1. Quantum dots and their applications in biology
Quantum dots (QDs) are colloidal nanocrystals of semiconductors with a
size range of 1 to 10 nm [1]. They have recently emerged as powerful fluorescent
probes for biomolecular and cellular imaging applications. QDs have several
advantages over small organic dyes and fluorescent proteins such as size-tuneable
photoluminescence, wide excitation range spanning the UV to near infra-red
(Figure 4.1.), narrow emission, strong brightness, and high resistance to
photobleaching and degradation. QD fluorophores are mainly used in biological
imaging, in vitro for fixed cells and tissues as well as in vivo for live cells and
animal imaging [2-4].
Figure 4.1. Tuning fluorescence emission based on quantum dot size (A) and composition (B) (adapted from Bailey et al.; [1])
Cellular labelling with QDs permits extended visualisation of cells under
continuous illumination and multicolour imaging. QDs have been used for antigen
detection, and labelling of plasma membrane, cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins in
fixed cells [5-7]. In live cells, the process is more delicate because cellular viability
has to be maintained. QDs are generally taken-up into the live cell by endocytosis,
microinjection or electroporation. Targeted-uptake, implying delivery to a specific
148
cell compartment, is also possible through QDs labelled with specific peptides.
Inside live cells, they can be tolerated for extended amounts of time [1, 2]. Using
QDs with a long absorption wavelength, one can achieve a deeper penetration of
live tissues than the existing dyes. They have been used for mapping, visualising
and tracking cancer cells in animals in vivo [8, 9].
QD labelling assays have also been developed for detection of DNA,
proteins and other biomolecules in vitro. DNA-coated QDs have been employed
for in situ hybridizations [10], probes for human metaphase chromosomes [11], and
in single-nucleotide polymorphism and multi-allele DNA detection [12]; while
protein-coated QDs have been used in numerous immunoassays [13].
Finally, QDs have been reported as fluorescence resonance energy
transfer (FRET) donors. Self-assembling acceptor dye-labelled proteins are
attached onto QD donor surfaces, QD donor emission can be size-tuned to improve
spectral overlap with a particular acceptor dye. To further improve FRET efficacy,
one can use multiple acceptors [14].
QDs for biological applications are generally made of a CdSe core coated
over with a protective layer of ZnS. This hydrophobic surface is then modified to
make them more water-soluble and to allow attachment of biomolecules. The
conjugation of a biomolecule to a QD is generally achieved through a covalent
bond, electrostatic or hydrophobic interactions [1, 2]. The ability to control the site
of attachment is important to ensure that the biomolecule bound to the QD is still
active. Site-specific noncovalent binding of QDs to biomolecules has been
achieved and examples include those that exploit carbohydrate-lectin and
streptavidin-biotin interactions [15, 16].
4.1.2. Metal-mediated labeling of hexahistidine-tagged proteins
The method to purify proteins with histidine residues was first described
in 1987 by Schacher and co-workers [17]. The number of six histidine units was
149
found to be the most efficient under native conditions and in low or high salt
concentrations. Hexahistidine (His6) tags can generally be incorporated at the
termini of proteins with little or no impact on protein function and folding. Since
His6-tags are known to tightly interact with nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) complexes
of transition metal ions such as Cd2+, Hg2+, Co2+ and Ni2+ (Kd ~ 10 �M),
purification of histidine-tagged proteins is accomplished using NTA metal
complexes immobilized on resins. After binding, the target protein can be eluted by
a gradient of imidazole [18].
Binding affinity between metal-NTA complexes and His6-tagged proteins
was applied to fluorescence labeling of proteins. The first example was reported by
Ebright and co-workers who attached the widely used fluorochromes Cy3 and Cy5
to Ni2+:NTA units [19]. Binding of the His6-tagged transcription factor catabolite
activator protein (CAP) to a (Ni2+:NTA)2-Cy3 or (Ni2+:NTA)2-Cy5 resulted in a
large increase in fluorescence. The Ni2+:NTA constructs were highly specific for
the hexahistidine region. However, these constructs had relatively poor emission,
limiting their applications in biological systems. More recently, Lippard and co-
workers selectively labeled a His6-tagged extracellular protein using a fluorescein-
NTA conjugate, increasing fluorescence efficiency [20].
4.1.3. SjGST as a tool in biotechnology
GST gene fusion proteins are widely used in proteomics and genomics.
Two years after the identification of a Mr 26,000 antigen in mice as a functional
GST of the parasitic worm Schistosoma japonicum in 1986 [21], Smith and
Johnson first described the use of SjGST as a fusion tag for single-step purification
of polypeptides [22]. SjGST was cloned in a pGEX E. coli expression vector.
Bound fusion proteins can be purified from crude lysate by affinity
chromatography on immobilized GSH or GSH derivatives, and eluted with GSH.
In most cases, the fusion proteins have good aqueous solubility and are therefore
150
easy to purify. Generally, the fusion proteins are released from the GST-tag by
using site specific proteases such as thrombin or the blood coagulation factor Xa,
after which the GST carrier and the GST-tagged protease are removed by
absorption by GSH affinity chromatography [18].
In the late eighties, this expression system was used to generate
recombinant antigens targeting the GST fusion protein. For instance, Rickard and
co-workers prepared an antigen useful for vaccinating sheep against ovine
cysticercosis [23]. Later, Brunham and co-workers used the same technique in the
aim to develop a vaccine against several serovars of Chlamydia trachomatis, a
bacterium responsible for the chlamydiose disease [24].
More recently, pull-down or affinity precipitation assays using GST
fusion proteins have been developed to study protein-protein interactions [25]. A
GST fusion protein is expressed, purified and then immobilised on a GSH affinity
resin. Once bound, the fusion protein is incubated with cell extracts to pull down
the interacting target protein. This technique is widely used for identifying
unknown protein-protein interactions or specific regions involved in these
interactions. Using this process, Livingstone and co-workers identified a group of
proteins interacting with a tumour gene suppressor [26]. In another study, Kaelin
and co-workers characterised the sequence-specific DNA binding site domain of
the retinoblastoma protein which plays a role in cell growth regulation [27].
4.1.4. Aims and research strategy
The fluorescent labelling of specific proteins using a His6-tags fusion
strategy coupled to the recognition of these tags by Ni-NTA has been recently
extended to QDs. During this study, Song and co-workers showed that Ni-NTA-
containing QDs can be applied to imaging His6-tagged proteins in live cells [28]. In
a previous study, Mattousi and co-workers showed that Hisn-tags can also bind
with very high affinity to QDs with carboxylic acid functionalities requiring fewer
151
synthetic steps and cheaper reagents [29]. However, it was also reported that these
QDs bind His6-tagged proteins only in the presence of Ni2+ cations [30]. Therefore,
it is useful to look at the advantages, disadvantages and applicability of this fairly
new technique. In this study, Manish Gupta and Dr. Juan Mareque-Rivas
(University of Edinburgh) investigated binding of the well characterised His6-
tagged and untagged SjGST as model protein to CdSe-ZnS core-shell nanoparticles
with carboxylates, NTA, and Ni2+-bound NTA at the surface. For this purpose, I
purified and characterised both His6-tagged and untagged SjGSTs. QDs-GST
conjugates are interesting because GSTs catalyze the nucleophilic addition of GSH
to the electrophilic center of a range of nonpolar substrates as a way of detoxifying
a wide range of harmful endogenous and xenobiotic compounds, and in drug
resistance mechanisms. Since GST activity requires not only the formation of a
dimeric structure (i.e. protein-protein interactions) but also binding of both GSH
and an acceptor substrate (i.e., protein-substrate interactions), it is a good enzyme
to investigate the effect of specific and nonspecific binding of QDs on enzymatic
activity.
152
97 kDa 66 kDa 45 kDa 30 kDa 20.1 kDa 14.4 kDa
4.2. Results and discussion
4.2.1. Expression, purification and characterisation of SjGST and His6-
SjGST
The untagged SjGST was expressed and purified as described in chapter 1.
The N-terminal 6 histidine-tagged-SjGST was expressed at 37 °C in E. coli. BL21
(DE3) host cells, using the expression vector pET-6His-SjGST. After induction
with IPTG for 3 hours, an increase in expression of the recombinant protein of the
expected mass (~28 kDa) was observed by SDS-PAGE analyses (Figure 4.2.).
Figure 4.2. SDS-PAGE gel showing expression of His6-SjGST from E. coli before (-) and after (+) induction with IPTG. Clear overexpression of the GST protein (~28 kDa) is observed.
Although pET-6His-SjGST contains a lacI gene, a relatively high
expression of the recombinant protein is already observed without IPTG. It is likely
that the lac I repressor does not bind properly to the lac O operator of the same
plasmid, allowing expression without inducer. The His6-SjGST was purified using
a nickel column (immobilized metal affinity chromatography, IMAC), followed by
gel filtration chromatography with a 320 ml Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration column.
Cell free extracts, affinity columns flow-throughs (containing unbound protein)
and washes, and the collected fractions were used for SDS-PAGE analysis (Figure
4.3.).
M - +
153
After the first purification step with a Ni column, a relatively small
amount of unbound recombinant protein was found in the flow-through. The bound
His6-SjGST eluted in ten fractions (fractions 19 to 29) which were pooled,
concentrated and loaded on a Sephacryl-S200. Three fractions of highly
concentrated enzyme were collected from the gel filtration column and a yield of ~
48 mg was obtained. Despite the two purification steps, two bands of impurities
were found in fractions 14 and 15 of the gel filtration column. MALDI-TOF mass
spectrometry analysis of the pooled collected fraction was carried out after dialysis
against a 20 mM Tris/HCl buffer, containing 1.4 mM of β-mercaptoethanol. The
resulting spectrum is presented in Figure 4.4.
154
Purification of His6-SjGST
Figure 4.3. Elution profiles of His6-SjGST from the Ni column (A) and from the Sephacryl-S200 (B) showing the A280. Calibration markers are specified at the top of the S-200 UV trace, V0 is a void volume, VC is the column volume. Collected fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE (M: low molecular weight marker; E: cell free extract; F: flow through; W: wash; collected fractions are represented by their number).
M E F W 19 21 23 25 27 29
30 kDa
A
B
M 14 15 16
30 kDa
V0 158
kDa
75 k
Da
43 k
Da
29 k
Da
13.7
kD
a
6.5
kDa
VC
155
Figure 4.4. MALDI-TOF mass spectrum of His6-SjGST from 20,000 to 65,000
m/z.
Mass spectrometry analysis revealed that the sample was relatively pure.
A first peak showing a mass of 28,060.37 Da was observed which was really close
to the theoretical mass of His6-SjGST plus one proton (28,058 Da). A second peak
with a mass of 56,118.62 Da corresponded to the dimeric form of His6-SjGST plus
one proton (56,117 Da).
Kinetic parameters were determined for both the untagged and the His6-
tagged SjGSTs using a CDNB assays. His6-SjGST data were plotted with
Michaelis-Menten and are shown in Figure 4.5. Kinetic parameters towards CDNB
for both enzymes are summed up in table 4.1.
28,060.37 Da [His6-SjGST + H]
56,118.62 Da [2 His6-SjGST + H]
156
Figure 4.5. Michaelis-Menten representation of His6-SjGST activity towards the substrates GSH (A) and CDNB (B). GSH and CDNB concentrations were varied from 1 µM to 2 mM and 0.5 µM to 1 mM, respectively. Table 4.1. Kinetic parameters for SjGST and His6-SjGST
KM
GSH (mM) KMCDNB (mM) kcat
CDNB (s-1) kcat/KMCDNB
(mM-1.s-1)
Specific Activity (µmol.min-1.mg-1)
SjGST 0.35 +/- 0.03 4.65 +/- 0.92 50.0 +/- 8.3 10.8 105.1 +/- 17.6
His6-SjGST 0.39 +/- 0.01 4.32 +/- 0.64 54.6 +/- 7.3 1.3 116.8 +/- 15.6
Kinetic results show that both the untagged and the tagged SjGSTs are
active. Moreover, His6-SjGST displayed similar parameters to the untagged
enzyme, meaning that the presence of a histidine tag at the N-terminus of SjGST
does not affect its function.
4.2.2. Investigation on His6-SjGST binding to Ni-NTA capped quantum
dots
QDs decorated with Ni-NTA were prepared by Manish Gupta from CdSe-
ZnS core-shell dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA)-capped QDs (Figure 4.6.). He used QDs
with a maximum fluorescence emission at 614 nm; and found that the
[GSH] (µM)
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500
Rate
(µ
mo
l/m
in/m
g)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
[CDNB] (µM)
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200
Rate
(µ
mol/m
in/m
g)
0
5
10
15
20
25A B
157
photoluminescence intensity of the Ni-NTA-capped QD is ~ 85% that of the NTA-
capped QD. This is an important feature as the photoluminescence is not quenched
by the presence of Ni2+ in contrast to some organic dyes [19].
Figure 4.6. Schematic representation of a DHLA-capped QD (top) and a Ni-NTA-capped QD (bottom). Maximum fluorescence emission at 597 nm.
A solution of QDs or PBS buffer (as a control) was incubated with either
the untagged or His6-tagged SjGST for two hours at room temperature. The
enzyme-QDs complexes were separated from the unbound enzyme molecules by
passing this solution through a 35 nm pore size membrane. The retentate
containing the QD-bound enzyme was dissolved in a PBS solution of imidazole to
release the enzyme, and both retentate and filtrate were analysed by SDS-PAGE
(Figure 4.7.).
SS
OH
O
QDCdSe
ZnS
SS
NH
O
O
O
Ni2+N
OO
OH2
OH2
O O
QD
158
Figure 4.7. SDS-PAGE of the retentate (R) and filtrate (F) after ultrafiltration through a Nanosep 300K filter of His6-GST (a), untagged GST (b), His6-GST incubated with QD (c), and untagged GST incubated with QD (d). In each case, the enzyme and QD concentrations were 16.5 �M and 9.0 �M, respectively.
In the absence of the QD, His6-tagged and untagged GST were found only
in the filtrate. It has been shown in several studies that DHLA-capped CdSe-ZnS
core-shell QDs are able to bind histidine-tagged protein by coordination to Zn2+
ions at the nanocrystal surface [29, 31-33]. However, interestingly in this study, no
protein was found in the retentate when incubating DHLA-capped QDs with GSTs.
Lack of binding could be due to steric hindrance at the N-terminal domain of the
histidine tag, preventing access and therefore interaction with the Zn2+ of the QD’s
shell. It is also possible that the different synthetic procedures used to prepare QDs
lead to subtle changes at the QD surface which affect binding of biomolecules. It is
also important to note that His-tagged proteins can behave differently depending on
whether the histidine tag is located at the N- or C-terminus, and that in the studies
reporting direct His-tag binding to carboxylate-coated QDs the histidine tag was
located at the C-terminus. In contrast, using the same experimental conditions the
Ni-NTA-capped QDs immobilized both enzymes and more His6-tagged than
untagged GST was found in the retentate. Binding was also investigated in the
presence of high salt concentrations. His6-GST binding to Ni-NTA-capped QDs
was not affected by 1 M NaCl. In contrast, untagged GST did not bind to the QDs
under these conditions, which suggests it is predominantly electrostatic. Therefore,
159
high salt concentrations can be used to avoid binding of untagged proteins while
ensuring binding of the desired His6-tagged target.
The enzyme was easily released from the QD surface upon addition of 0.5
M imidazole, which competes for the Ni2+ binding sites. Thus, decorating the
surface of the QD with Ni2+ complexes of NTA seems a good approach for
noncovalent site-specific fluorescent labeling of proteins, which can be used for
instance if carboxylate-functionalized QDs lacking Ni2+ ions fail. Potential
advantages of attaching Ni-NTA units to QDs could be stronger interactions with
the His-tag (Kd � 10-10 M) [34] and less sensitivity to steric hindrance and surface
properties by being further away from the nanocrystal surface.
Recently, the value of magnetic nanoparticles as affinity probes to
selectively trap and separate His-tagged proteins from cell lysates has been
elegantly demonstrated [35-38]. The protein purification efficiency of the Ni-NTA-
capped QDs was investigated by incubating cell lysates containing His6-tagged
SjGST for 2 hours. Remarkably, pure fluorescently labelled GST was obtained
simply by ultracentrifugaton of this mixture (Figure 4.8.). Thus, by using the Ni-
NTA-capped QDs it is possible to purify and fluorescently label His-tagged
proteins in a single step. Current methods for efficiently purifying and
fluorescently labeling His-tagged proteins need various labour-intensive and
expensive steps, such as conjugation of NTA derivatives on support materials or
the preparation of suitable magnetic nanoparticles for purification purposes,
followed by the attachment of fluorescent tags. Another construct suitable for one-
step protein purification and site-specific labelling was recently developed and
involves organic fluorophore-doped Ni-NTA-modified silica nanoparticles [39].
160
97 kDa 66 kDa 45 kDa 30 kDa 20.1 kDa 14.4 kDa
Figure 4.8. A, SDS-PAGE studies of the cell lysate containing His6-tagged SjGST (lane 2) and proteins released from the Ni-NTA-coated QDs treated with PBS containing 0.5 M imidazole (lane 3) and supernatant (lane 4) after ultracentrifugation. Lane 1 is the molecular weight marker. B, Images of the cell lysate after ultracentrifugation and of the pure QD-bound His6-tagged SjGST.
In order to obtain information about the effect of QD binding on the
catalytic activity of GST, Manish Gupta performed GST assays using CDNB. His6-
SjGST and untagged SjGST were incubated with the same concentration of Ni-
NTA-capped QD. He found that His6-tagged GST retained its activity after binding
to the QD, whereas the untagged GST lost approximately 22% of its activity
(Figure 4.9.). It is suggested that the ability of the His6-tag to control the position
of the Ni-NTA-capped QD relative to the GST active site is responsible for
preserving the activity of the enzyme.
1 2 3 4
Centrifuged cell lysate
Redissolved pure QD-bound His6-SjGST
B A
161
Figure 4.9. Activity of His6-tagged and untagged SjGST in the absence and in the presence of Ni-NTA coated QDs. The QD alone did not have any activity.
The X-ray crystal structure of SjGST [40] shows that the N-terminus,
which is where the His6-tag was placed, is approximately 25 Å away from the
essential catalytic residue Tyr7 (Figure 4.10.). I have examined the distribution of
positively and negatively charged residues and found that there are positive and
negative regions close to the active site. These are sites where in the absence of the
His6-tag nonspecific electrostatic binding could occur, disrupting the enzyme
activity. By comparing the activity of the enzyme which did not bind to the QD
with that of the enzyme before incubation with QD, Manish Gupta estimated the
protein binding capacity and number of His6-GST molecules immobilized on each
QD (16). This surface coverage correlates well with that found for QDs and
proteins of similar size [32, 33].
His6-SjGST Untagged SjGST QD+ His6-SjGST QD+ untagged SjGST
Time (min)
Abs
orba
nce
at 3
40 n
m
162
Figure 4.10. X-ray crystal structure of the SjGST homodimer highlighting the catalytically crucial Tyr7 residue in red, and the N-terminus site for the His6-tag in green (left); surface charge distributions (right). These figures were generated using PyMol.
163
4.3. Conclusions
Ni-NTA-coated QDs provide a straightforward method to, in one step, purify
and reversibly label proteins fluorescently. By using these QDs, the N-terminal His6-
tagged SjGST was selectively labelled and purified, which was not possible using QDs
with carboxylates at the surface. Moreover, it was found that Ni2+ provides a docking
site which helps to precisely orient the fluorescent nanoparticle on the protein surface
and that, as a result, GST retained its activity. The use of histidine tags has been
broadly adopted in the molecular biology and biochemistry communities, and therefore
this specific conjugation strategy should enable widespread use of these QDs for a
broad range of biological applications.
164
4.4. Chapter 4 references
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3. Gao X., Y.L., Petros J.A., Marshall F.F., Simons J.W. and Nie S., In vivo molecular
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13. Goldman, E.R., et al., Avidin: a natural bridge for quantum dot-antibody conjugates. J Am Chem Soc, 2002. 124(22): p. 6378-82.
14. Medintz, I.L., et al., A fluorescence resonance energy transfer-derived structure of a
quantum dot-protein bioconjugate nanoassembly. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 2004. 101(26): p. 9612-7.
15. Babu, P., S. Sinha, and A. Surolia, Sugar-quantum dot conjugates for a selective and
sensitive detection of lectins. Bioconjug Chem, 2007. 18(1): p. 146-51. 16. Howarth, M., et al., Targeting quantum dots to surface proteins in living cells with
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purification of recombinant
proteins with a novel metal chelate adsorbent. Bio/Technology, 1988. 6: p. 1321-1325. 18. Terpe, K., Overview of tag protein fusions: from molecular and biochemical
fundamentals to commercial systems. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol, 2003. 60(5): p. 523-33.
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19. Kapanidis, A.N., Y.W. Ebright, and R.H. Ebright, Site-specific incorporation of
fluorescent probes into protein: hexahistidine-tag-mediated fluorescent labeling with
(Ni(2+):nitrilotriacetic Acid (n)-fluorochrome conjugates. J Am Chem Soc, 2001. 123(48): p. 12123-5.
20. Goldsmith, C.R., et al., Selective labeling of extracellular proteins containing
polyhistidine sequences by a fluorescein-nitrilotriacetic acid conjugate. J Am Chem Soc, 2006. 128(2): p. 418-9.
21. Smith, D.B., et al., Mr 26,000 antigen of Schistosoma japonicum recognized by
resistant WEHI 129/J mice is a parasite glutathione S-transferase. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 1986. 83(22): p. 8703-7.
22. Smith, D.B. and K.S. Johnson, Single-step purification of polypeptides expressed in
Escherichia coli as fusions with glutathione S-transferase. Gene, 1988. 67(1): p. 31-40. 23. Johnson, K.S., et al., Vaccination against ovine cysticercosis using a defined
recombinant antigen. Nature, 1989. 338(6216): p. 585-7. 24. Toye, B., et al., Immunologic characterization of a cloned fragment containing the
species-specific epitope from the major outer membrane protein of Chlamydia
trachomatis. Infect Immun, 1990. 58(12): p. 3909-13. 25. Ren, L., et al., Glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays using dehydrated
immobilized glutathione resin. Anal Biochem, 2003. 322(2): p. 164-9. 26. Kaelin, W.G., Jr., et al., Identification of cellular proteins that can interact specifically
with the T/E1A-binding region of the retinoblastoma gene product. Cell, 1991. 64(3): p. 521-32.
27. Chittenden, T., D.M. Livingston, and W.G. Kaelin, Jr., The T/E1A-binding domain of
the retinoblastoma product can interact selectively with a sequence-specific DNA-
binding protein. Cell, 1991. 65(6): p. 1073-82. 28. Kim, J., et al., Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid-modified quantum dots as a site-specific labeling
agent of histidine-tagged proteins in live cells. Chem Commun (Camb), 2008(16): p. 1910-2.
29. Sapsford, K.S., Pons, T., Medintz, I. L., Higashiya, S., Brunel, F. M., Dawson, P. E., and Mattoussi, H., Kinetics of metal-affinity driven self-assembly between proteins or
peptides and CdSe-ZnS Quantum dots. Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2007. 111: p. 11528-11538.
30. Yao, H., et al., Quantum dot/bioluminescence resonance energy transfer based highly
sensitive detection of proteases. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl, 2007. 46(23): p. 4346-9. 31. Ipe, B.I. and C.M. Niemeyer, Nanohybrids composed of quantum dots and cytochrome
P450 as photocatalysts. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl, 2006. 45(3): p. 504-7. 32. Mattoussi, H., Mauro, J. M., Goldman, E. R., Anderson, G. P., Sundar, V. C., Mikulec,
F. V., and Bawendi, M. G. , Self-Assembly of CdSe-ZnS Quantum Dot Bioconjugates
Using an Engineered Recombinant Protein. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2000. 122: p. 12142-12150.
33. Medintz, I.L., et al., Self-assembled nanoscale biosensors based on quantum dot FRET
donors. Nat Mater, 2003. 2(9): p. 630-8. 34. Hainfeld, J.F., et al., Ni-NTA-gold clusters target His-tagged proteins. J Struct Biol,
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166
35. Lee, I.S., et al., Ni/NiO core/shell nanoparticles for selective binding and magnetic
separation of histidine-tagged proteins. J Am Chem Soc, 2006. 128(33): p. 10658-9. 36. Xu, C., et al., Nitrilotriacetic acid-modified magnetic nanoparticles as a general agent
to bind histidine-tagged proteins. J Am Chem Soc, 2004. 126(11): p. 3392-3. 37. Lee, K.B., S. Park, and C.A. Mirkin, Multicomponent magnetic nanorods for
biomolecular separations. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl, 2004. 43(23): p. 3048-50. 38. Lee, K.S. and I.S. Lee, Decoration of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles with
Ni2+: agent to bind and separate histidine-tagged proteins. Chem Commun (Camb), 2008(6): p. 709-11.
39. Kim, S.H., M. Jeyakumar, and J.A. Katzenellenbogen, Dual-mode fluorophore-doped
nickel nitrilotriacetic acid-modified silica nanoparticles combine histidine-tagged
protein purification with site-specific fluorophore labeling. J Am Chem Soc, 2007. 129(43): p. 13254-64.
40. McTigue, M.A., D.R. Williams, and J.A. Tainer, Crystal structures of a schistosomal
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167
Chapter 5: Materials and methods
168
5.1. General Materials
5.1.1. General reagents
All reagents, chemicals and media were purchased from Sigma, Aldrich,
Fisher, Biorad, Pharmacia or Oxoid unless otherwise stated. All competent cells and
plasmids were purchased from Novagen and all chromatography columns were from
GE Healthcare unless otherwise indicated. The pET-6His-SjGST plasmid was
constructed in the laboratory, prior to this work, by Dr. Dominic Campopiano.
Plasmids pET15-b-mGSTM1 and pET9-a-mGSTA4 were generously supplied by
Prof. John Hayes (University of Dundee, UK). Plasmid pET15-b-hGSTP1 was a kind
gift from Dr. Sylvie Blond (University of Illinois, USA). Pasmids pET11-d-TKB587
and pET11-d-TKB611 were provided by Dr. Gregers Andersen (University of Arhus,
Denmark).
5.1.2. Media and Solutions
Sterilisation of media: all media were autoclaved at 121°C for 20 minutes prior to
use.
Luria Bertani (LB): tryptone (10 g.l-1), yeast extract (5 g.l-1), sodium chloride (10 g.l-
1); pH adjusted to 7.5 with sodium hydroxide.
2 x YT: tryptone (16 g.l-1), yeast extract (10 g.l-1), sodium chloride (5 g.l-1); pH
adjusted to 7.5 with sodium hydroxide.
SOC: tryptone (20 g.l-1), yeast extract (5 g.l-1), sodium chloride (0.5 g.l-1), magnesium
sulfate (5 g.l-1), glucose (3.2 g.l-1); pH adjusted to 7.5 with sodium hydroxide.
Agar plates: LB Agar (35 g.l-1) was dissolved in the appropriate volume of deionised
water. The specific antibiotic was added prior to making plates.
169
X-Gal plates: S-Gal™/LB Agar Blend from Sigma-Aldrich containing tryptone (10
g.l-1), yeast extract (5 g.l-1), sodium chloride (10 g.l-1), agar (12 g.l-1), S-Gal (0.3 g.l-1),
ferric ammonium citrate (0.5 g.l-1), IPTG (0.03 g.l-1) was dissolved in the appropriate
amount of deionised water according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The specific
antibiotic was added prior to making plates.
DNA-running buffer: TAE buffer – 40 mM Tris, 20 mM Acetic acid, 1 mM EDTA
(pH 8.3).
Protein-running buffer: TGS buffer – 25 mM Tris, 192 mM glycine, 0.1% (w / v)
SDS (pH 8.3).
5.1.3. Purification buffers
Purification of His6-hGSTP1-1, His6-mGSTM1-1, His6-SjGST, His6-TKB587 and
His6-TKB611
• Buffer A (binding buffer): 20 mM Tris-HCl, 0.5 M NaCl, 5 mM imidazole (pH
6.8)
• Buffer B (elution buffer): 20 mM Tris- HCl, 0.5 M NaCl, 0.5 M imidazole (pH
6.8)
• Buffer C (gel filtration buffer) : 0.1 M KPhos buffer (0.0503 M KH2PO4,
0.0497 M K2HPO4), 150 mM NaCl (pH 6.8)
• Buffer D (dialysis buffer): 0.1 M KPhos buffer (pH 6.8)
Purification of SjGST, SjGST-Y7F, mGSTA4-4 and BphK_J2315
• Buffer E (binding buffer): 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7)
• Buffer F (elution buffer): 20 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM glutathione (pH 8)
• Buffer C (gel filtration buffer) : 0.1 M KPhos buffer (0.0503 M KH2PO4,
0.0497 M K2HPO4), 150 mM NaCl (pH 6.8)
• Buffer D (dialysis buffer): 0.1 M KPhos buffer (pH 6.8)
170
5.2. Molecular Biology
5.2.1. Bacterial cell lines
Strain Genotype Applications
Top 10™
(Competent)
F- mcrA ,(mrr-hsdRMS-mcrBC)
�80lacZ,M15 ,lacX74 deoR
recA1 araD139 ,(ara-leu)7697
galU galK -- rpsL (StrR) nupG
Cloning
DH5�™
(Competent)
F- �80lacZ,M15 ,(lacZYA-argF)
U169 deoR recA1 endA1 hsdR17
(rk-, mk+) phoA supE44.- thi-1
gyrA96 relA1
DNA isolation
JM109
(Competent)
endA1 recA1 gyrA96 thi hsdR17
(rk-, mk+) relA1 supE44, ,(lac-proAB),
[F’ traD36 proAB, laqIqZ,M15]
Protein expression
Transformation of DNA ligations
BL21(DE3)
(Competent) F- ompT hsdSB (rB
- mB-) gal dcm (DE3) Protein expression
5.2.2. Plasmids pGEX6P-1, pET-6His-SjGST, pET9-a-mGSTA4, pET15-b-
mGSTM1, pET15-b-hGSTP1, pET11-d-TKB588 and pET11-d-TKB611
The plasmid pGEX-6P-1 used for expression of SjGST was obtained from
Amersham Biosciences (Genbank Accession number U78872; figure 5.1.).
171
Figure 5.1. The plasmid pGEX6P-1 used for expression of SjGST.
Plasmid pET-6His-SjGST used for expression of the N-terminal 6-histidine
tagged SjGST was generated previously from the modification of pGEX6P-1, in our
laboratory (Figure 5.2.).
Figure 5.2. The plasmid pET-6His-SjGST used for expression of His6-SjGST.
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172
Plasmids pET9-a-mGSTA4 and pET15-b-mGSTM1 were kindly provided by
Prof. John Hayes and his research group based in the University of Dundee (Figures
5.3. and 5.4.).
Figure 5.3. The plasmid pET9-a-mGSTA4 used for expression of mGST A4-4.
Figure 5.4. The plasmid pET15-b-His6-mGSTM1 used for expression of His6-mGST M1-1.
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173
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Plasmid pET15-b-His6-hGSTP1 was kindly provided by Dr. Sylvie Blond and
his research group based in the University of Illinois, Chicago, USA (Figure 5.5.) [1].
Figure 5.5. The plasmid pET15-b-His6-hGSTP1 used for expression of His6-hGST P1-1.
Plasmids pET11-d-TKB588 and pET11-d-TKB611 were generously provided
by Dr. Gregers Andersen and his research group based in the University of Aahrus,
Denmark (Figures 5.6. and 5.7.) [2].
174
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Figure 5.6. The plasmid pET11-d-TKB588 used for expression of the 588 N terminus truncated eEF1Bγ from Saccharomyces cereviseae.
Figure 5.7. The plasmid pET11-d-TKB611 used for expression of the 611 N terminus truncated eEf1bγ from Saccharomyces cereviseae.
5.2.3. Oligonucleotide primers
The following oligonuclotide primers were used in this study. Restriction
sites are underlined and mutation sites are in bold.
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175
Name Sequence (5’-3’)
BphK_J2315 Forward GAC ACC CAC GAA GGA ACC ATA TGA AGC T
BphK_J2315 Reverse GCA CCG CTG CGG CGG CCA CGC GTC ATC G
BphK_J2315_NcoI Forward CCT GTT GCG ATG ACC CAT GGC CGC CGC A
BphK_J2315_NcoI Reverse TGC GGC GGC CAT GGG TCA TCG CAA CAG G
pGEX Forward GGG CTG GCA AGC CAC GTT TGG TG
pGEX Reverse CCG GGA GCT GCA TGT GTC AGA GG
pUC/M13 Forward GTT TTC CCA GTC ACG AC
pUC/M13 Reverse CAG GAA ACA GCT ATG AC
SjGST_Y7F Forward CCT ATA CTA GGT TTT TGG AAA ATT AAG
SjGST_Y7F Reverse CTT AAT TTT CCA AAA ACC TAG TAT AGG
T7 Promoter TAA TAC GAC TCA CTA TAG
T7 Terminator CTA GTT ATT GCT CAG CGG
5.2.4. DNA manipulation
5.2.4.1. Purification of plasmid DNA
Plasmid DNA was prepared using QIAprep® Spin Miniprep Kit (Qiagen)
following the manufacturer’s instructions, provided with the kit and summarized
below.
An over-night culture (1.5 mL) was transferred to a sterile epindorf (1.5 mL)
and centrifuged (13,000 rpm, 5 minutes) using a bench-top centrifuge. The supernatant
was discarded and the procedure repeated with a further 1.5 mL of culture. The pellet
was resuspended in P1 buffer (250 µL) and P2 buffer (250 µL) was added. This was
176
followed by immediate invertion of the epindorf 4-6 times. Subsequently, N3 buffer
(350 µl) was added and the mixture inverted immediately (4-6 times). The resultant
cloudy mixture was centrifuged (13,000 rpm, 10 minutes) after which, the supernatant
was transferred to a QIAprep spin column and centrifuged (13,000 rpm, 1 minute).
The flow-through was discarded and the spin column washed with PB buffer (500 µL)
and centrifuged (13,000 rpm, 1 minute). The column was washed further with PB
buffer (750 µL) and centrifuged (13,000 rpm, 1 minute). The column was centrifuged
for one more minute to remove any residual wash buffer before the purified DNA was
eluted with sterile water (100 µL) and stored at -20˚C until required.
5.2.4.2. Tranformation of E. coli competent cells with recombinant DNA
Competent cells were transformed according to the manufacturer’s
instructions. DNA (up to 40 ng) was added to an aliquot of competent cells and gently
mixed. This was left on ice for 2 minutes before the cells were heat shocked (42°C, 30
sec). The cells were then grown in 80 �l SOC medium at 37°C for 1 hr. Finally, the
cells were spread to dryness on selective agar plates and incubated at 37°C overnight.
5.2.4.3. Electrophoresis of DNA
The required amount of agarose was added to TAE buffer (typically 1 g / 100
ml) and heated at 100°C until dissolved. The solution was allowed to cool to 55°C and
ethidium bromide was added to a final concentration of 0.5 �g.ml-1. The gel was then
poured into a casting mould and allowed to set at room temperature. Loading dye
(Promega) was added to the sample prior to loading the DNA migrated using a
potential difference of 100 V for an adequate time to achieve separation. The gels were
viewed and photographed under UV-light. HyperLadder I and IV (Bioline) were used
as molecular weight markers.
177
5.2.4.4. Digestion of DNA with restriction endonucleases
The required amount of DNA (0.5 – 1 �g) was treated with the appropriate
amount of endonuclease and buffer, and incubated for at least 3 hours at 37°C before
analysis by electrophoresis on agarose. The restriction enzyme EcoRI was used as a
control for the digestion of pGEM-T easy plasmids.
5.2.4.5. Gel-extraction of DNA
DNA was purified from agarose using QIAquick® Gel Extraction Kit
(Qiagen) following the manufacturers’ instructions which are summerised below.
Agarose, containing the DNA, was covered of QG buffer (600 µL – 1 mL)
and incubated at 50 ˚C until the agarose had completely dissolved. This solution was
transferred to a spin column and centrifuged (13,000 rpm, 1 minute) and the
supernatant discarded. QG buffer (500 µL) was added and the column centrifuged
again (13,000 rpm, 1 minute). The supernatant was discarded and PE buffer (750 µL)
added to the column and incubated for 2-5 minutes. The column was centrifuged
(13,000 rpm, 1 minute), the supernatant discarded, and the column centrifuged again
to remove any residual buffer. The purified DNA was eluted with sterile water (30 µL)
and stored at -20˚C until required.
5.2.4.6. Direct cloning of PCR products
All PCR products were cloned into the pGEM-T easy vector (Promega) using
the manufacturers’ instructions. 2x rapid T4 DNA ligase buffer (2 �l), pGEM-T easy
vector (1 �l), PCR product (3 �l) and T4 DNA ligase from Promega (1 �l) were gently
mixed and incubated for one hour at room temperature. 2 �l of the reaction mixture
was used to transform JM109 competent cells as described in section 5.2.4.2.
178
5.2.4.7. Cloning into plasmid vectors
The DNA fragment cut with suitable restriction enzymes (8 �l), the host
vector cut with suitable restriction enzymes (2 �l), 2x Quick ligation buffer (2 �l) and
Quick T4 DNA ligase from New England Biolabs (1 �l) were gently mixed and
incubated for 10 min at room temperature. The reaction mixture (3 �l) was used to
transform JM109 competent cells as described in section 5.2.4.2.
5.2.4.8. Storage of bacterial stocks
LB medium (5 mL) containing the appropriate antibiotic was inoculated with
the strain of interest and incubated over-night at 37 °C. Subsequently, 225 µL of sterile
80% glycerol and 1 mL of bacterial culture were placed into a labeled 1.5 mL
cryotube, giving a final bacterial stock containing 15% glycerol. The tube was quickly
vortexed and placed at -80°C until required.
5.2.4.9. Polymerase chain reactions
Polymerase chain reactions (PCRs) were performed using a Techne TC-3000
thermal cycler.
5.2.4.9.1. Amplification of DNA
A typical amplification PCR contained two Ready to Go PCR™ beads
(Amersham Biosciences), DNA template (2 �l), primer-forward 10 �M (5 �l), primer-
reverse 10 �M (5 �l), and distilled water (final volume of 50 �l). The cycling
parameters of the PCR are listed below:
179
PCR steps Temperature (°C) Time (min) Number of
cycles
Initial denaturation 95 2 1
Denaturation 95 1 25
Annealing 55 1 25
Extension 72 2 25
Termination 72 10 1
The PCR product was then subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis and the
required band was excised. DNA was purified as described in section 5.2.4.5.
5.2.4.9.2. DNA sequencing
The sequencing reactions were performed using the BigDye® Terminator
v3.1 Cycle sequencing kit (PE Applied Biosystems). The PCR mixtures contained
DNA template ~5 pmol (5 �l), 5x reaction buffer (2 �l), primer 10 �M (1 �l) and Big
Dye 3.1 (2 �l). The pET, pUC/M13 and pGEX primers were used to sequence the
pET, pGEM and pGEX inserts, respectively. Sequencing of the 5’-end of the DNA
template was carried out with the primer forward while the sequencing of the 3’-end
was carried out with the primer reverse. The cycling parameters of the PCR are listed
below.
PCR steps Temperature (°C) Time Number of cycles
Denaturation 95 30 sec 16
Annealing 60 20 sec 16
Extension 68 4 min 16
180
Automated DNA sequencing was performed on an ABI prism 377 DNA
sequencer using the Sanger dideoxy chain termination method. Sequence data were
analysed using Contig Express within Vector NTI Advance™ V10 software package.
5.2.4.9.3. Site-directed mutagenesis
Mutations were performed by using Stratagene site-directed mutagnenesis kit.
Each reaction contained plasmid DNA (5 �l), 10x reaction buffer (5 �l), primer-
forward (1 �l), primer-reverse (1 �l), dNTP mix (1 �l), distilled water (final volume 50
�l) and Pfu DNA polymerase 2.5 u / �l (1 �l). The amplification parameters are listed
below. One microliter (5 U) of DpnI restriction enzyme was added to the PCR product
and incubated at 37°C for 2 h. The reaction products were used to transform competent
E. coli cells DH5� (DE3).
PCR steps Temperature (°C) Time Number of cycles
Initial denaturation 95 2 min 1
Denaturation 95 30 sec 16
Annealing 55 60 sec 16
Extension 68 1 min / 1000 bp 16
Termination 68 7 min 1
5.2.4.9.4. Generation of a SjGST_Y7F mutant
A site-directed mutagenesis was carried out as described in section 5.2.4.9.3,
using plasmid pGEX-6P-1 as a template. SjGST_Y7F Forward and Reverse primers
were used to change the TAT codon in the SjGST sequence to TTT, so that the
181
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tyrosine amino-acid residue was replaced by a phenylalanine (SjGST_Y7F).
Transformed DH5α were spread on agar plates containing ampicillin (100 µg/mL).
Resulting colonies were used to inoculate 5 mL LB liquid media with ampicillin (100
µg/mL) and cultured over-night at 37 ˚C. Subsequently, plasmid vectors were purified
as described in section 5.2.4.1. and sequenced as described in section 5.2.4.9.2.
pGEX6P-1 vectors containing the mutation were named pGEX-6P-1-Y7F (Figure 5.8.)
and kept at -20˚C until required.
Figure 5.8. The plasmid pGEX6P-1-Y7F used for expression of SjGST_Y7F
5.2.4.9.5. Isolation and cloning of bphK_J2315 in pET22-b
Isolation of bphK_J2315 from Burkholderia cenocepacia genome
B. cenocepacia J2315 genomic DNA was provided by Dr. Josefin
Bartholdson from our laboratory. The known BphK protein sequence from B.
xenovorans strain LB400 was used to search the genome of B. cenocepacia for similar
translated sequences. The highest match was obtained with the gene BCAM0431
sharing 45% identity. The BphK_J2315 Forward and Reverse primers were designed
182
subsequently and used to amplify bphK_J2315 from the J2315 genome as described in
section 5.2.4.9.1.
The PCR product was ligated into pGEM®-T Easy vector according to the
manufacturer’s instructions summarized below. The PCR product (2 µL, ~25 ng) was
added to 5 µL of 2X rapid ligation buffer, 1 µL of pGEM®-T Easy plasmid, 1 µL of
T4 DNA ligase and 11 µL of distilled and filtered water. The reaction was mixed by
pipetting and incubated for 1 h at room temperature.
After incubation, 2 µl of reaction were used to transfom JM109 competent
cells as described in section 5.2.4.2. Transformed cells were spread on X-Gal plates
containing ampicillin (100 µg/mL) for a subsequent blue:white screening. After over-
night incubation at 37˚C, several white colonies were used to inoculate 5 mL LB liquid
media with ampicillin (100 µg/mL) and cultured over-night at 37 ˚C. Subsequently,
plasmid vectors were isolated as described in section 5.2.4.1. and sequenced as
described in section 5.2.4.9.2. pGEM vectors containing bphk_J2315 were kept at -
20˚C until required.
Cloning of bphk_J2315 in pET22-b
In order to insert the gene in a pET22-b expression vector, a site-directed
mutagenesis was carried out to introduce an NcoI restriction site at its C-terminus,
using BphK_J2315_NcoI Forward and Reverse primers as described in section
5.2.4.9.3. The PCR product was used to transform DH5α (DE3) competent cells
which were subsequently spread on agar plates containing ampicillin (100 µg/mL).
After over-night incubation at 37 ˚C, several colonies were picked and used to
inoculate 5 mL of LB medium with ampicillin (100 µg/mL) each. Plasmids were
isolated with a QIAprep® Spin Miniprep Kit as described in section 5.2.4.1. and
subjected to digestion using NdeI and NcoI restriction enzymes as described in section
5.2.4.4. Restriction products were separated by gel electrophoresis. DNA fragments
183
��� ����������! "��
�����
lacI
BphK1-J2315Amp
������ ��
����������
����������
������������
���������
���������
������ ��
� ������
� ������
������� �
����������
�����������
������ ���
with a size corresponding to that of bphk_J2315 (624 bp) were extracted from the
agarose gel as described in section 5.2.4.5. and cloned in pET22-b as described in
section 5.2.4.7. The insertion was confirmed by restriction analyses using NdeI and
NcoI restriction enzymes and DNA sequencing. The resulting vector containing the
gene was named pET22-b-BphK_J2315 (Figure 5.9.) and was kept at -20˚C until
required.
Figure 5.9. The plasmid pET22-b-BphK_J2315 used for expression of BphK_J2315 5.3. Protein work
5.3.1. Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
SDS-PAGE was used to analyse proteins on the basis of their molecular mass
with a Tris-Glycine or “Laemmli” discontinuous buffering system [3].
SDS sample 2x loading buffer contained Tris/HCl (1.5 M, pH 8.0, 1 ml),
glycerol (2 ml), bromophenol blue (0.05%, 2 ml), SDS (10%, 1.6 ml) and �-
mercaptoethanol (0.4 ml). Samples for analysis by SDS-PAGE were prepared by
184
addition of appropriate volume of this buffer, followed by heating (100°C, 5 min) and
centrifugation (13,000 rpm, 5 min).
A standard method was used for the production of acrylamide gels with a
running gel containing 15% acrylamide and a stacking gel of 4% acrylamide. Briefly,
the running gel (acrylamide/bis (29:1) 15% w/v, SDS 0.1 % w/v, TEMED 0.15% v/v
and APS 0.1% w/v in Tris buffer (375 mM, pH 8.8)) and was poured between glass
plates, levelled and set at room temperature. The stacking gel (acrylamide/bis (29:1)
4% w/v, SDS 0.1 % w/v, TEMED 0.15 % v/v and APS 0.1% w/v in Tris buffer (375
mM, pH 6.8)) was then added and set at room temperature using a mould to produce
the wells in the finished gel. Gels were run in protein-running buffer at 150 V and then
visualised using Coomassie Brilliant Blue R250, GelCode (Pierce) in accordance with
manufacturers’ instructions.
5.3.2. Expression and purification of glutathione transferases
5.3.2.1. Large scale expression
A general method, as follows, was used to express the GST isoforms and the
GST-like proteins.
The appropriate plasmid vector was used to transform E. coli expression
strain BL21 (DE3). One colony was picked and used to inoculate 200 ml of LB broth
containing ampicillin (100 �g/ml) or kanamycin (30 �g/ml) and grown overnight at
37°C with agitation (250 rpm). The 200 ml overnight culture was used to inoculate 3/5
L of appropriate media, grown to an OD600 of 0.6 at 37°C and induced with IPTG for
three to five hours at the appropriate temperature. The conditions of expression for
each protein are detailed below:
185
Tem
per
atu
re o
f
gro
wth
aft
er
ind
uct
ion
37 °
C
37 °
C
30 °
C
37 °
C
37 °
C
37 °
C
37 °
C
37 °
C
37 °
C
Tim
e of
grow
th
aft
er i
nd
uct
ion
3-4
h
3-4
h
5-6
h
3-4
h
3-4
h
3-4
h
3-4
h
5-6
h
5-6
h
[IP
TG
]
req
uir
ed
(mM
)
0.1
0.1
0.1
1.0
none
2.5
1.0
0.25
0.25
Cu
ltu
re
med
ia
2YT
LB
bro
th
2YT
2YT
2YT
2YT
2YT
2YT
2YT
An
tib
ioti
c
resi
sta
nce
Am
p
Am
p
Am
p
Am
p
Kan
Am
p
Am
p
Am
p
Am
p
Pla
smid
pGE
X-6
-P1
pET
-6H
is-S
jGS
T
pGE
X-6
-P1-
Y7F
pET
15-b
-His
6-m
GST
M1
pET
9-a-
mG
ST
A4
pET
15-b
-His
6-hG
ST
P1
pET
22-b
-B
phK
_J23
15
pET
11-d
-TK
B58
7
pET
11-d
-TK
B61
1
En
zym
e
SjG
ST
His
6-Sj
GS
T
SjG
ST
_Y7F
His
6-m
GS
TM
1-1
mG
STA
4-4
His
6-hG
ST
P1-
1
Bph
K_J
2315
TK
B58
7
TK
B61
1
186
Cells were harvested by refrigerated centrifugation at 5 000 x g for 10 min
immediately after induction. Cell pellets were stored at -20°C until required.
5.3.2.2. Purification of SjGST, SjGST_Y7F, mGSTA4-4 and BphK_J2315
The expressing pellet was resuspended (4 ml/g wet cell pellet) in buffer E
containing one protease inhibitor cocktail tablet (EDTA-free). The resuspended pellet
was sonicated for 15 min (30 s on / 30 s off) on ice and was then centrifuged at 27 000
x g for 30 min at 4°C to remove insoluble debris. The supernatant was filtered through
a 0.45 �m membrane prior to chromatography at 4°C. The cell lysate was loaded onto
a 20 ml GSTPrep FF 16/10 column (GE Healthcare) previously equilibrated with
binding buffer E. The column was then washed with 5 column volumes of buffer A
before elution using a linear gradient of glutathione (0 – 100% buffer F) over 5 column
volumes. Fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE and proteins that did not bind to the
column were shown to be in the flow-through fraction with the rest of the unbound
material. Fractions containing the protein of interest were pooled, dialysed twice
against 4 L of buffer D, using a Spectra/Por® 8,000 molecular-weight-cutoff dialysis
tubing, and fractionated into aliquots of 1 mL. 225 µl of sterile 80% glycerol were
added to each 1 mL protein aliquot in a 1.5 mL cryotube. Tubes were frozen in liquid
nitrogen and stored at -20°C until required.
5.3.2.3. Purification of His6-SjGST, His6-hGSTP1-1, His6-mGSTM1-1,
TKB587 and TKB611
The expressing pellets were resuspended in binding buffer A (4 ml per gram
of wet cell paste) with one protease inhibitor cocktail tablet (EDTA-free) and
disrupted by sonication (15 pulses of 30 s at 30 s intervals) at 4°C. The cell debris
were removed by centrifugation at 27 000 x g for 30 minutes at 4°C, after which the
supernatant was filtered through a 0.45 �m membrane prior to chromatography. The
cell lysate was loaded onto a 5 ml HisTrap™ HP column (GE Healthcare) previously
187
equilibrated with buffer A. The column was then washed with 5 column volumes of
buffer A before the bound material was eluted using a linear gradient of imidazole (0 –
100% buffer B) over 20 column volumes at 4°C. Fractions were analysed by SDS-
PAGE and those containing the protein of interest were pooled and applied onto a 320
ml HiPrep Sephacryl S-200 HR column (GE Healthcare) pre-equilibrated with buffer
C, except for TKB587 which was applied to a 120 ml HiLoad Superdex S-75 column
(GE Healthcare). The column was then washed with one column volume of buffer C.
Fractions containing the protein of interest were pooled, dialysed twice against 4 L of
buffer D, using a Spectra/Por® 8,000 molecular-weight-cutoff dialysis tubing, and
fractionated into aliquots of 1 mL. 225 µl of sterile 80% glycerol were added to each 1
mL protein aliquot in a 1.5 mL cryotube. Tubes were frozen in liquid nitrogen and
stored at -20°C until required.
5.3.2.4. Sephacryl 200 and Superdex 75 columns calibration
Calibrations were performed with low and high molecular weight calibration
kits (GE Healthcare) according to the manufacturer’s guide lines. Columns were
preequilibrated with 20 mM Tris buffer containing 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.5 and then run
with Blue Dextran 2000 (1 mg/ml). Elution volumes were referred as the void
volumes, V0. Mixture of low and high molecular weight standards (5 mg/ml each) were
successively run and the elution volumes noted Ve. The gel phase distribution
coefficient (Kav) of the protein was calculated as (Ve – V0)/(Vc – V0), where Vc is the
total volume of the column (320 ml). Kav was plotted against log(Mw) of each sample
injected (Figure 5.10. and 5.11.) and a linear equation was fitted by Sigmaplot software
(Systat Software Inc.).
188
Figure 5.10. Calibration curve of Sephacryl 200 Hiprep 26/60 column.
Figure 5.11. Calibration curve of Superdex 75 Hiprep 16/60 column.
5.3.3. Analyses of purified proteins
5.3.3.1. Bradford assay
Protein concentrations of cell lysates, soluble fractions and purified GSTs
were determined by the method of Bradford [4] using a Quick StartTM Bradford
Protein Assay (Bio-Rad). This method is based on the change in absorbance of
Coomassie Blue G-250 upon binding of protein. The dye exists in three forms: cationic
(red), neutral (green), and anionic (blue). Under acidic conditions, the dye is
Log (Mw)
3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0 5.2 5.4
Kav
-0.2
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
8566.2551.0 +−= xy
Log (Mw)
3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
Kav
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
558.2507.0 +−= xy
189
predominantly in the doubly protonated red cationic form (λmax = 470 nm). However,
when the dye binds to protein, it is converted to a stable unprotonated blue form
(λmax = 595 nm). It is this blue protein-dye form that is detected at 595 nm in the
protein assay. A standard curve was produced from serial dilutions (Table 5.1) of a
known stock concentration of BSA (2 mg/mL).
1 mL of 1X Dye Reagent was added to a clean, dry cuvette containing the
protein sample (20 µL). The solution was mixed by inverting the cuvette 3-4 times and
incubated at room temperature for 10 minutes. Each sample was carried out in
duplicate. The absorbance of the standards and unknown samples was measured at 595
nm. The concentration of protein was calculated according to the standard curve.
Standard Concentration (mg/mL)
A 2.00
B 1.50
C 1.00
D 0.75
E 0.50
F 0.25
G 0.125
H 0.025
I 0.00
Table 5.1. Standard curve concentrations.
5.3.3.2. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS)
LC-ESI-MS was performed on a MicroMass Platform II quadrupole mass
spectrometer equipped with an electrospray ion source. The spectrometer cone voltage
was ramped from 40 to 70 V and the source temperature set to 140°C. Protein samples
were separated on a Jupiter C5 reverse phase column (5 �m, 250 x 4.6 mm,
190
Phenomenex) with a Waters HPLC 2690 directly connected to the spectrometer.
Proteins were eluted from the column with a 5-95% acetonitrile (containing 0.01%
TFA) gradient at a flow rate of 0.1 ml.min-1. The total ion count in the range 400-1980
m/z was scanned at 0.1 s intervals. The scans were accumulated, spectra combined and
the molecular mass determined by the MaxEnt and Transform algorithm of the Mass
Lynx software (Micromass, U.K.).
5.3.3.3. MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry
Proteins were buffer-exchanged against a Tris-HCl buffer (20 mM) using a
10000 MWCO centrifuge filter (Vivaspin) and co-crystallised with sinapinic acid used
as a matrix, directly on MALDI plate. A volume of 0.5 µl was deposited on a MALDI
plate and was kept at room temperature until dried. MALDI-MS spectra (two
replicates) were measured on a Voyager DE-STR MALDI-TOF mass spectrometer.
Spectra were acquired in the range of 20,000 to 65,000 Da. Other variables were set as
follows: accelerating voltage = 25,000 V, grid voltage = 96%, guide wire = 0.15%,
extraction delay time = 800 nsec. Typically, 100 shots were taken for each sample
combined and analysed using the DataExplorer software from Applied Biosystems.
5.3.3.4. In vitro glutathione transferase assays
Activity assays were performed on a Varian’s Cary 50 UV-Vis
spectrophotometer and inhibition assays were carried out on a Molecular Devices
SpectraMax M5 UV-visible 96 well-plates spectrophotometer.
5.3.3.4.1. Activity assays
The initial rates of GST-catalyzed conjugation of GSH with CDNB were
determined spectrophotometrically according to the method of Habig et al. [5]. The
KmCDNB for the CDNB-GSH conjugation reaction was determined using a range of
191
CDNB concentrations while the GSH concentration was fixed at 2 mM. Determination
of the KmGSH was conducted using a range of GSH concentrations, while the CDNB
concentration was constant (1 mM final concentration). Enzymatic reactions were
carried out in potassium phosphate, 0.1 M, pH 6.8 (reaction buffer) containing 2.5%
ethanol.
Preparation of stock solutions
GST samples and a GSH stock solution (40 mM) were prepared in reaction
buffer. A CDNB stock solution (20 mM) was prepared in 50% ethanol.
A set of 12 substrate concentrations was prepared as a two-fold serial dilution
set for each substrate as follows.
- GSH:
1 mL of GSH stock solution (40 mM) was added to 9 mL of reaction buffer, giving a
second GSH stock solution of 4 mM. 5.6 mL of this second stock solution were added
to 4.4 mL of reaction buffer, giving a GSH concentration of 2222.2 µM.
From this solution, 5 mL were serially added 11 times to 5 mL of reaction buffer,
giving the concentrations presented in the table below.
- CDNB:
1 mL of CDNB stock solution (20 mM) was added to 9 mL reaction buffer, giving a
second CDNB stock solution of 2 mM.
5.6 mL of this second stock solution were added to 4.4 mL of reaction, giving a CDNB
concentration of 1111.1 µM in reaction buffer containing 2.8% ethanol.
From this solution, 5 mL were serially added 11 times to 5 mL of reaction buffer with
2.8% ethanol, giving the concentrations presented in the table below.
192
GSH initial
concentrations
(µµµµM)
GSH
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
CDNB initial
concentrations
(µµµµM)
CDNB
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
2222.2 2000 1111.1 1000
1111.1 1000 555.6 500
555.6 500 277.8 250
277.8 250 138.3 125
138.3 125 69.4 62.5
69.4 62.5 34.7 31.3
34.7 31.3 17.4 15.6
17.4 15.6 8.7 7.8
8.7 7.8 4.4 3.9
4.4 3.9 2.2 2
2.2 2 1.1 1
1.1 1 0.51 0.5
Lower substrate concentrations were used when assaying SjGST_Y7F:
GSH initial
concentrations
(µµµµM)
GSH
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
CDNB initial
concentrations
(µµµµM)
CDNB
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
22.2 20 88.8 80
11.1 10 44.4 40
5.6 5 22.2 20
2.8 2.5 11.1 10
1.4 1.25 5.6 5
0.7 0.625 2.8 2.5
0.35 0.31 1.4 1.25
0.17 0.15 0.7 0.625
0.085 0.08 0.35 0.31
0.042 0.04 0.17 0.15
193
Reaction settings
The reactions were maintained at 25°C, and the conditions were generally
saturating for the invariant substrate.
To a 1 ml cuvette were added:
- 900 µl of either CDNB (8.7 to 1111.1 µM) or GSH (17.4 to 2222.2 µM);
- GST (50 �l, ~0.15 mg.ml-1);
The solution was mixed well and after incubation at 25°C for 5 minutes, GSH
or CDNB (50 �l, 40 or 20 mM, respectively) was added quickly and mixed. The
enzymatic reactions were monitored at 340 nm (∆ε = 9.6 mM-1.cm-1) for 5 minutes.
Each reaction was carried out in triplicate. Controls were performed without
enzyme for each substrate concentration. The specific activity of the enzymes was
expressed as micromoles of substrate per minute per milligram of enzyme and was
corrected for the rate of the spontaneous non-enzymatic conjugation reaction of CDNB
and GSH. Kinetic data were analysed using the graphing software SigmaPlot®.
5.3.3.4.2. Inhibition studies
Inhibition studies were carried out on SjGST and hGST P1-1. In these
experiments, enzymatic reactions were carried out in potassium phosphate, 0.1 M, pH
6.8 (reaction buffer) containing 10% DMSO.
GST samples and a stock solution of GSH (40 mM) were prepared in reaction
buffer. Stock solutions CDNB (20 mM) and inhibitors (20 mM) were prepared in
DMSO.
Each reaction was carried out in triplicate. Controls were performed in the
same conditions without enzyme and initial rates were corrected for the rate of the
spontaneous non-enzymatic conjugation of CDNB and GSH. Data were collected and
analysed using SigmaPlot® software.
194
Measure of IC50s
IC50 values, with respect to the GSH-CDNB conjugation reaction, were
determined for SjGST assayed with compounds 4, 5a to 5j; and hGST P1-1 assayed
with compounds 4, 5c, 5g, 5h and 5i.
Sets of 17 inhibitor concentrations were prepared in DMSO, spanning a range
from 0.2 to 1,000 µM, final concentrations:
Inhibitor initial
concentrations (µµµµM) 4 8 12 16 20 40 80 120 160 200 400
Inhibitor final
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 2 4 6 8 10 20
Inhibitor initial
concentrations
(µµµµM)
800 1200 1600 2000 3000 4000 10,000 20,000
Inhibitor final
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
40 60 80 100 150 200 500 1,000
To a 360 �l well were added 240 �L of reaction buffer, GST (15 �L, ~ 0.15
mg.mL-1) and inhibitor (15 �L, 17 concentrations spanning from 4 �M to 20 mM). The
solution was mixed well and incubated at 25°C for 5 minutes. CDNB (15 �L, 20 mM)
and GSH (15 �L, 40 mM) were added and the plate was quickly shaked. Absorbance
was measured at 340 nm, 25°C for 5 minutes.
Measure of Kis
The Ki values with respect to both GSH and CDNB were determined for
SjGST and hGST P1-1 with compounds 5c and 5g.
Solutions of CDNB were prepared in 50% DMSO.
195
Sets of 8 substrate concentrations were serially prepared from the stock
solutions, giving the following concentrations:
GSH initial
concentrations
(mM)
GSH
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
CDNB initial
concentrations
(mM)
CDNB
concentrations in
the reaction (µµµµM)
40 2000 20 1000
20 1000 10 500
10 500 5 250
5 250 2.5 125
2.5 125 1.25 62.5
1.25 62.5 0.625 31.3
0.625 31.3 0.313 15.6
0.313 15.7 0.157 7.8
Sets of 5 inhibitor concentrations were used spanning a range from 2.5 to 200
µM (final concentrations) as a three-fold serial dilution set. Dilutions were made
directly in the 96-well plate. 340 µL of a 235 µM stock solution prepared in reaction
buffer with 6% DMSO were pipetted into 4 wells (3 replicates + blank). Subsequently,
85 µL were serially added 4 times to 170 µL of reacion buffer containing 6% DMSO,
giving the following concentrations:
Initial
inhibitor
concentrations
(µµµµM)
235 78.4 26.1 8.7 2.9
Final inhibitor
concentrations
in the reaction
(µµµµM)
200 66.7 22.2 7.4 2.5
To the wells containing inhibitor (255 µL) were added 15 µL of GST (~0.15
mg.mL-1) and the solution was incubated at 25˚C for 5 minutes. Subseqently, 15 µL of
196
GSH (0.313 to 4 mM) and 15 µl of CDNB (0.157 to 2 mM) were added to the
reaction. The plates were quickly shaked and absorbance was measured at 340 nm,
25˚C for 5 minutes.
5.3.3.4.3. Isothermal Calorimetry
Isothermal calorimetry (ITC) was carried out in collaboration with Prof. Alan
Cooper and the Glasgow Biological Microcalorimetry Facility. The ITC measurements
were performed on a VP-ITC calorimeter (Microcal Inc Northampton, USA) at 25°C.
SjGST and hGST P1-1 were dialysed against a 0.1 M potassium phosphate
buffer, pH 6.8 containing 10 % DMSO. The concentrations of SjGST and hGSTP1-1
(~10 �M for titrations with 5c and 5g; ~20 µM for titrations with 4) were determined
by measuring absorption at 280 nm [∆ε280(SjGST) = 41.2 mM-1.cm-1 ; ∆ε280(hGST P1-
1) = 38.8 mM-1.cm-1].
Compounds 5c, 5g and 4 were provided as solids by Venughopal Bhat
(University of Edinburgh). The right amounts of compounds were accurately weighed
out using an AnD FX-200 benchtop balance and dissolved in the same dialysis buffer.
Ligand concentrations were approximately 600 µM.The same buffer was used for
titration, instrument calibration and baseline controls.
The proteins SjGST and hGST P1-1 were placed in the 2 ml sample chamber
and 5c, 5g or 4 in the syringe. A typical ITC measurement consisted of a first control
injection of 1 �l followed by 29 successive injections of 10 �l for 20 s with a 3
minutes interval between each injection.
Control experiments in which ligands were directly injected in the buffer
without enzyme were performed in order to evaluate the heat contributions due to
coupled protonation events upon binding. The observed heat effects were identical to
the heat signals after complete saturation of the proteins. Therefore, the non-specific
background was usually estimated by averaging the small heats at the end of the
SjGST and hGST P1-1 titrations.
197
Raw data were collected and the baseline was corrected for ligand heats
dilution. The peaks generated were integrated using ORIGIN software (Microcal Inc)
by plotting the values in microcalories against the molar ratio of injectant to reactant
within the cell.
Data were fitted using the one single-site binding model. From the
dissociation constant KD and the reaction enthalpy value H, the change in free Gibbs
energy (G°) and entropy change (S°) can be calculated using the equation G° = -
RT ln(1/KD) = H - TS° where R is the universal gas constant and T the absolute
temperature.
5.4. Molecular docking
5.4.1. Ligand alignments
The superimposition of glutathione S-transferase ligands was carried out by
using Relibase+3.0.0 [6]. First, a search was performed to find binding sites that share
a sequence identity between 40% and 100% to the target SjGST crystal structure
1M9A [7]. The 38 structures with bound ligand were superimposed by using binding
site residues only. Finally, the ligands from the superimposed structures were extracted
and analysed.
5.4.2. Binding mode prediction of SjGST with 5g
The SjGST crystal structure 1M9A [8] was used as initial conformation for
binding mode generation. The glutathione group of 5g was mapped onto the 1M9A
ligand coordinates. The thiophen hydrazone group of 5g was oriented towards the
cavity, lying at the end of the S-hexyl site, as observed for the ligand bound to
cGSTM1-1 with pdb code 1C72 [7]. In the next step, the protein in complex with 5g
was minimized, considering the ligand as fully flexible. For the protein all residues
were kept rigid, except the amino acids that define the pocket at the end of the S-hexyl
site (R103, V106, V161, V162, Q204).
198
5.4.3. Binding mode prediction of hGST P1-1 with 5c
The hGST P1-1 crystal structure 6GSS [9] was used as initial conformation
for binding mode generation. The glutathione group of 5c was mapped onto the 6GSS
ligand coordinates. The tertbutyl hydrazone fragment of 5c was oriented towards the
cavity, lying at the end of the S-hexyl site, as observed for the ligand bound to
cGSTM1-1 with PDB code 1C72 [7]. In the next step, the protein in complex with 5c
was minimized, considering the ligand as fully flexible. For the protein all residues
were kept rigid, except the amino acids that define the pocket at the end of the S-hexyl
site (R100, Y103, I161, H162, N204).
5.5. NMR analyses on 3f and 3g
1H NMR spectra were recorded in DMSO on a Brüker dpx600 (600 MHz)
instrument and calibrated to residual solvent peaks (CDCl3 7.26 ppm). The data are
presented as follows: chemical shift (in ppm on the scale), multiplicity (s=singlet,
d=doublet), the coupling constant (J, in Hertz) and integration.
199
5.6. Chapter 5 references
1. Chang, M., J.L. Bolton, and S.Y. Blond, Expression and purification of hexahistidine-
tagged human glutathione S-transferase P1-1 in Escherichia coli. Protein Expr Purif, 1999. 17(3): p. 443-8.
2. Jeppesen, M.G., et al., The crystal structure of the glutathione S-transferase-like
domain of elongation factor 1Bgamma from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem, 2003. 278(47): p. 47190-8.
3. Laemmli, U.K., Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of
bacteriophage T4. Nature, 1970. 227(5259): p. 680-5. 4. Bradford, M.M., A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram
quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal Biochem, 1976. 72: p. 248-54.
5. Habig, W.H., M.J. Pabst, and W.B. Jakoby, Glutathione S-transferases. The first
enzymatic step in mercapturic acid formation. J Biol Chem, 1974. 249(22): p. 7130-9. 6. Bergner, A., et al., Use of Relibase for retrieving complex three-dimensional
interaction patterns including crystallographic packing effects. Biopolymers, 2001. 61(2): p. 99-110.
7. Chern, M.K., et al., Tyr115, gln165 and trp209 contribute to the 1, 2-epoxy-3-(p-
nitrophenoxy)propane-conjugating activity of glutathione S-transferase cGSTM1-1. J Mol Biol, 2000. 300(5): p. 1257-69.
8. Cardoso, R.M., et al., Characterization of the electrophile binding site and substrate
binding mode of the 26-kDa glutathione S-transferase from Schistosoma japonicum. Proteins, 2003. 51(1): p. 137-46.
9. Oakley, A.J., et al., The structures of human glutathione transferase P1-1 in complex
with glutathione and various inhibitors at high resolution. J Mol Biol, 1997. 274(1): p. 84-100.
200
Appendices
IC50 data
hGST P1-1 assayed with 4, 5c, 5g, 5h and 5i:
[4] (M)
0 200 400 600 800 1000
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
IC50
= 331 +/- 20 M
[5c] (M)
0 200 400 600 800 1000
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 57 +/- 2 M
[5g] (M)
0 100 200 300 400 500
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 87 +/- 3 M
[5h] (M)
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 119 +/- 8 M
[5i] (M)
0 200 400 600 800 1000
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 84 +/- 4 M
SjGST assayed with 4 and 5a to 5j:
[4] (M)
0 200 400 600 800 1000
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 279 +/- 23 M
[5a] (M)
0 50 100 150 200
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 24 +/- 1 M
[5b] (M)
0 200 400 600 800 1000
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 40 +/- 2 M
[5c] (M)
0 200 400 600 800 1000
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 50 +/- 3 M
[5d] (M)
0 50 100 150 200
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 26 +/- 1 M
[5e] (M)
0 100 200 300 400 500
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 36 +/- 2 M
[5f] (M)
0 200 400 600 800 1000
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 61 +/- 3 M
[5g] (M)
0 50 100 150 200
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 22 +/- 1 M
[5h] (M)
0 100 200 300 400 500
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 34 +/- 1 M
[5i] (M)
0 100 200 300 400 500
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 37 +/- 1 M
[5j] (M)
0 50 100 150 200
% in
hib
itio
n
0
20
40
60
80
100
IC50
= 25 +/- 1 M
Raw data of ITC controls
ITC control experiments: heat signals generated by injection of a ligand (~600 M;
A: 5c; B: 5g; C: 4) directly into buffer without enzyme. The observed heat effects
were identical to the heat signals after complete saturation of the proteins
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
18.3
18.4
18.5
18.6
18.7
18.8
18.9
19.0
19.1
19.2
19.3
19.4
19.5
Glu into P1
Glu into SJ
Ortho C into SJ
Raw Data
Time (min)
µca
l/se
c
A
B
C
1H NMR assignments
Hydrazone 3f: 1H NMR δH 12.16 (s, 1H), 8.50 (s, 1H), 8.37 (d, J =
1.96 Hz, 1H), 8. 37 (dd, J = 8.45, 2.02 Hz, 1H), 8.03 (d, J = 0.98
Hz, 1H), 7.85 (d, J = 8.42 Hz, 1H), 7.36 (s, 1H), 6.73 (dd, J = 3.52,
1.74 Hz, 1H).
Hydrazone 3g: 1H NMR δH 12.00 (s, 1H), 8.38 (s, 1H), 8.00 (d, J =
1.96 Hz, 1H), 7.08 (dd, J = 8.45, 2.02 Hz, 1H), 8.07 (d, J = 0.98 Hz,
1H), 7.85 (d, J = 8.42 Hz, 1H), 7.24 (s, 1H), 7.24 (dd, J = 3.52, 1.74
Hz, 1H).
© 2010 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
Nucleophilic catalysis of acylhydrazoneequilibration for protein-directed dynamiccovalent chemistryVenugopal T. Bhat1†, Anne M. Caniard1†, Torsten Luksch2, Ruth Brenk2, Dominic J. Campopiano1* and
Michael F. Greaney1*
Dynamic covalent chemistry uses reversible chemical reactions to set up an equilibrating network of molecules atthermodynamic equilibrium, which can adjust its composition in response to any agent capable of altering the free energyof the system. When the target is a biological macromolecule, such as a protein, the process corresponds to the proteindirecting the synthesis of its own best ligand. Here, we demonstrate that reversible acylhydrazone formation is aneffective chemistry for biological dynamic combinatorial library formation. In the presence of aniline as a nucleophiliccatalyst, dynamic combinatorial libraries equilibrate rapidly at pH 6.2, are fully reversible, and may be switched on or offby means of a change in pH. We have interfaced these hydrazone dynamic combinatorial libraries with two isozymes fromthe glutathione S-transferase class of enzyme, and observed divergent amplification effects, where each protein selectsthe best-fitting hydrazone for the hydrophobic region of its active site.
Dynamic covalent chemistry (DCC) uses reversible chemicalreactions to set up equilibrating assemblies of molecules atthermodynamic equilibrium1–4. The resultant dynamic com-
binatorial library (DCL) is responsive to the addition of a template,which will selectively amplify the best binding compounds from theequilibrium distribution. The essence of the concept lies in the sub-sequent adjustment of the DCL equilibrium, which will expressmore of the best binding compounds at the expense of the poorerones. A DCL is thus adaptive and capable of evolutionary behaviour,whereby individual components are either amplified or reduced inresponse to template-directed binding events. These concepts havebeen applied to diverse problems in biological and medicinal chem-istry5–11, synthetic receptor–ligand interactions12–16, self-replica-tion17–19, complex molecule synthesis20–22 and materialsscience23,24. Taken together, they represent the best characterizedexamples to date of systems chemistry, which looks to synthesizecomplex molecular networks and study their properties and behav-iour in macrocosm, rather than as a sum of their individualcomponents25,26.
We are interested in DCC systems that use a biological molecule,such as a protein, to template assemblies of small molecules atdynamic equilibrium27. Here, the DCC experiment provides amethod for discovering, studying and ranking novel proteinligands, concepts fundamental to medicinal chemistry. In theseterms, the DCC process bridges the gap between targeted chemicalsynthesis of drug candidates and their biological binding assay,meshing the two processes into a single step in which the structureof the biological target directs the assembly of its own best inhibitorin situ.
A particular challenge for DCC in biological systems lies in theimplementation of a suitable reversible reaction that can operateeffectively under the physiological conditions required by the bio-template. Lehn has defined two limiting cases for DCL construction:
adaptive and pre-equilibrated DCC28. The adaptive DCL representsthe ideal scenario, where the DCL chemistry is fully compatible withthe biological target and the ensuing binding events control theevolution of the DCL composition. Pre-equilibrated DCL refers tothe cases where the reversible chemistry used to constitute the
NH2
Rn CHO
N
Rn
Rn
Rn
pH < 7
Rn CHOpH < 4
no biologicalapplications
Unstableimine DCL
NaBH3CN
NH
Rn
Rn
Stableacylhydrazone
DCL
Static amine library
a
AnilinepH = 6,
biologicalapplications
O
NHNH2Rn
O
NH
RnN Rn
b
Figure 1 | Transimination reactions for DCC. a, Imine DCLs: reversible
addition of amines to aldehydes gives unstable imines that cannot be
isolated or analysed directly, necessitating an in situ reduction step. The
resultant static library of amines may or may not share the binding profile of
the imine precursors. b, Acyl hydrazone DCLs: reaction of aldehydes with
hydrazides gives acylhydrazones that have good stability and are amenable
to analysis. Equilibration requires acidic conditions that are incompatible with
biological targets—a nucleophilic catalyst such as aniline may enable DCL
formation at biocompatible pH.
1EastChem, School of Chemistry, University of Edinburgh, King’s Buildings, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JJ, UK, 2College of Life Sciences, Universityof Dundee, James Black Centre, Dow Street, Dundee DD1 5EH, UK; †These authors contributed equally to this work. *e-mail: [email protected];[email protected]
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DCL is not compatible with the biological target, meaning that theDCL and the target must be separated in some manner. This resultsin static libraries in which the molecular recognition events thatcontrol DCL composition are lost. Given the challenges associatedwith conducting fast, freely reversible chemistry under physiologicalconditions, it is not surprising that methods for true adaptive DCLgeneration are limited, with the majority of successful systems usingsulfur-based transformations such as disulfide bond formation orthiol conjugate addition29–32. The development of new methodsfor adaptive DCLs is thus central to the application of DCC to bio-logical systems, as the chemistry will define the target scope andrange of available DCL components.
The reversible formation of C¼N imine-type linkages emergedearly on as a DCL-forming reaction33. The ready availability ofdiverse carbonyl and amine building blocks, plus the extensive pre-cedent of imine formation in biochemical systems, makes it an idealcandidate reaction. However, the inherent instability of imines inaqueous solution presents serious analytical and isolation problemsin the DCC context. The solution to this in the field of biologicalDCC has been to construct pseudo-adaptive DCLs where theimine linkage is reduced in situ to an amine with an externalhydride source. The resulting library contains static amine com-ponents that can correspond to the imines in binding affinity,
although both false-positive and false-negative results are possible.In addition, the introduction of an in situ reduction step complicatesthe DCL equilibration and makes it difficult to distinguish betweengenuine thermodynamic selection of the best binders and selectionof those compounds that are kinetically favoured.
An advance on simple imine formation in DCC came from theSanders group, who introduced acylhydrazones as reversible lin-kages34. The reaction has proven to be an excellent balancebetween facile reversibility and product stability; the acylhydrazoneproducts formed are stable to analysis and isolation, and the reac-tion has very good equilibration properties, as is made evident byits application to a large number of elegant abiological DCCstudies subsequently reported by the Sanders group35–37. It hasnot, however, been generally possible to apply this reaction directlyto adaptive biological DCC systems because of the acidic pHrequired for reversibility to occur in a reasonable timeframe(pH , 4)38,39. A single elegant study from Poulsen has shown thatslow equilibration of acylhydrazones, taking one week at pH 7.2,can be accelerated in the presence of the enzyme carbonic anhy-drase, enabling in situ identification of binders using mass spec-trometry40. We were keen to apply this proven reaction to ourDCC studies of enzymes, and reasoned that it could be harnessedas a powerful tool for biological investigation if a suitable catalyst
CHO
NO2
Cl
N
O O O
S
O
S
O
O O
t-BuO
NH
OMeOH2N HO
N
HN
ClNO2
Aniline pH 6.2
NHNH2 NHNH2 NHNH2 NHNH2
NHNH2NHNH2NHNH2
O
NHNH2
1 3
2a 2b 2c 2d 2e
2f 2g 2h 2i 2j
O
NHNH2O
O
NHNH2S
R
OR
O
NHNH2
2
a
b
c d
3a
3i 3b 3g 3e
3f
3h 3c3j
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
30
50
2010
018 20 22 24 26 28 30 32
t = 1 h
t = 48 h
t = 5 days
t = 0 h
t = 2 h
t = 6 h
01020304050
01020304050
Time (min)
18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32Time (min)
18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32
18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32
18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32
18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32
3d
401
50
10152025
51015202530
0
0
51015202530
3a3h
3i 3f
3b 3g3e
3j
3c
3d
Figure 2 | Aniline-catalysed acylhydrazone formation. a, Aldehyde equilibration with hydrazide to form an acylhydrazone. b, Hydrazide components of the
ten-membered DCL. c, DCL established in the absence of aniline. Conditions: aldehyde (5mM), hydrazides (20 mM each) in NH4OAc buffer (50 mM, pH¼
6.2) containing 15% DMSO. d, DCL established in the presence of aniline (10 mM).
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could be found to accelerate the equilibration. Nucleophilic catalysisof semicarbazone formation using aniline derivatives was estab-lished in classic work from Jencks in the 1960s, and recentlyapplied to hydrazone and oxime formation in peptide ligationsystems by Dawson41–44. We reasoned that an additive such asaniline could promote the equilibration of acylhydrazides and alde-hydes at pH values closer to the physiological window required bybiological targets in DCC (Fig. 1).
We began by reacting aldehyde 1 (Fig. 2), related to the knownglutathione S-transferase (GST) substrate chlorodinitrobenzene(CDNB, see below), with an excess of the ten aryl hydrazides2a–2j at room temperature. The hydrazides were chosen to randomlydisplay aryl and heteroaryl groups and featured eight acyl and twosulfonyl hydrazides (2d and j). Equilibration at pH 6.2 wasslow, and only two of the ten possible hydrazones could be observedby high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) after 1 h(Fig. 2c). Notably, there was a significant amount of free aldehyde 1present throughout the reaction, despite the presence of excessamounts of the ten different hydrazides. Equilibrium was not com-plete after 48 h, and required incubation for a further 5 days untilthe library composition reached a steady-state composition withsignals for each of the ten hydrazones 3a–3j being clearly identified.In contrast, repeating the experiment in the presence of excessaniline produced a far higher rate of equilibration. A distribution ofacylhydrazones was observed after initial mixing and HPLC sampling,and complete equilibration of the ten components was observed afterjust 6 h (Fig. 2d). Aldehyde 1 could not be detected following initialmixing, indicating that it was continually being sequestered as an acyl-hydrazone component, reflecting the faster exchange processes oper-ating in the presence of aniline (see Supplementary Information for astudy on the effect of varying aniline concentration on rates of hydra-zone formation). We demonstrated the reversibility of the DCL bygenerating it from a different starting composition, hydrazone 3gplus the nine other hydrazides and aniline. An identical equilibriumdistribution to Fig. 2 was observed, indicating true thermodynamicequilibrium. A second control experiment confirmed the reversibilityof the DCL through the addition of excess hydrazide 2b to the pre-equilibrated DCL, which resulted in a large amplification of the corre-sponding acylhydrazone 3b (see Supplementary Information).
Having established that aniline could act as an effective nucleo-philic catalyst for hydrazone DCC formation at both a pH and time-frame reasonable for biomolecule stability, our next step was tointroduce proteins to the DCL. Our target chosen for DCC interrog-ation was the GST enzyme superfamily45. The GSTs are responsiblefor cell detoxification, catalysing the conjugation of glutathione(GSH) to a wide variety of xenobiotic electrophiles, thereby
protecting the cell from cytotoxic and oxidative stress. We havepreviously developed thiol conjugate addition DCLs directedtowards GST inhibition, and successfully interfaced the enzymewith small molecules so that it controlled library evolution27. TheGSTs are well suited to exploration using DCC methods, beingwell-characterized, robust proteins having nascent medicinal chem-istry application46,47. There are relatively few ligands reported in theliterature for GST binding—a plus point, as it would enable us to useDCC as a genuine discovery tool for new binding motifs, rather thanas a proof-of-principle process for confirming the binding ability ofknown ligands. The cytoplasmic GSTs are inherent dimers withactive sites composed of residues from both monomers, bifurcatingbetween a highly conserved G-site, which binds the endogenousligand GSH, and an H-site, which binds hydrophobic substratesfor GSH conjugation (Fig. 3). This bisubstrate architecture isparticularly appropriate for DCC interrogation, given that themethod essentially uses a reversible linkage to couple two sets offragment structures together48. Furthermore, within the GST super-family, the large, heterogeneous H-sites are functionally evolvedto accommodate many different hydrophobic substrates forconjugation, a classically difficult architecture to investigate usingorthodox structure-based drug-design methods.
We prepared two recombinant GST isozymes as targets, SjGSTfrom the helminth worm Schistosoma japonicum, a drug target intropical disease49, and hGST P1-1, a human isoform that has beentargeted in the treatment of chemotherapy drug resistance50. Aninitial control experiment with SjGST established that the enzymeretained GSH conjugation activity in the presence of aniline (upto 20 mM). The acylhydrazone DCL prepared in Fig. 2 was theninterfaced with the two protein targets and amplification wasmeasured (Fig. 4). Both DCLs demonstrated strikingly clear ampli-fication of hydrazone components; thiophene acylhydrazone 3g wasselected by SjGST and t-butylphenyl hydrazone 3c by hGST P1-1.
Synthesizing the DCL in the presence of bovine serum albumin(BSA, 1 equiv.) as a control experiment produced no measurableamplification of any component, indicating the GST enzymes asbeing responsible for component amplification. We further demon-strated that amplified components were bound in the targetH-region of the active site of the enzyme by performing conjugationexperiments with GSH. Conjugation of GSH to the aryl chloridegroup in hydrazones 3 by means of SNAr substitution is a slow reactionat pH 6.2, taking several days. In the presence of catalytic amounts ofSjGST, however, rapid formation of the SNAr conjugation adduct forhydrazone 3g was observed at pH 6.2. The amplified hydrazone canthus act as a substrate for SjGST and binds in the targeted H-site.
The amplified hydrazones were re-synthesized and assayedagainst both GSTs and found to be inhibitors of GSH conjugationof CDNB, but poor solubility prevented the determination of accu-rate IC50 values at the higher concentrations necessary to assay weakbinding compounds. To solve this problem, and simultaneouslyincrease the potency of our DCL components, we conjugatedGSH to aldehyde 1 using an SNAr reaction. We anticipated thatthe highly soluble GSH tripeptide motif would act as an ‘anchor’at the G-site, enabling exploration of the H-site with assorted hydra-zide fragments. This approach, in which a known enzyme–substrateinteraction is used for inhibitor discovery, is well exemplified in clas-sical medicinal chemistry drug design, GST inhibition51 and DCCmethods. The IC50 value for SjGST inhibition of the anchored frag-ment 4 was measured in the CDNB conjugation assay as 280 mM.
Initial DCC experiments using GS-conjugated aldehyde 4 andthe same ten hydrazides used previously confirmed the utility ofaniline as a nucleophilic catalyst (Fig. 5). Equilibration was completein 6 h, compared to 4 days in the absence of aniline, and each of theten acylhydrazones were clearly identified by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) (see Supplementary Information).As before, clear amplifications could be observed for both GST
Figure 3 | Structure of GST illustrating H- and G-sites. Grey, monomer 1;
yellow, monomer 2; green, G-site; red, H-site.
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targets: in each case the same hydrazide fragment was selected as thebest binder, thiophene (5g) for SjGST and t-butylphenyl (5c).Both components were amplified to over 300% of their con-centrations in the blank DCL, at the expense of nearly all other com-peting hydrazones. Also of note, the anisyl sulfonylhydrazone 5junderwent �100% amplification using hGST P1-1 as the onlyother positively selected component. The most significantreductions in equilibrium concentrations occurred for 5b, f and i(SjGST) and 5f, g and i (hGST P1-1).
The GST-directed DCLs were synthesized with the protein presentfrom the beginning of the experiment, that is, in the presence of alde-hyde 4 and the ten hydrazides 2a–2j. To verify that the amplificationresults were not due to a kinetic selection by means of target-acceler-ated synthesis, we added SjGST to the pre-equilibrated DCL. Thesame equilibrium distribution was achieved as is shown in Fig. 5,with hydrazone 5g strongly amplified, indicating that the amplifiedcomponents are the result of genuine thermodynamic selection.Further controls involved a BSA control experiment, which was nega-tive, and DCL synthesis in the presence of a large excess of the non-selective GST inhibitor ethacrynic acid. Component amplificationwas completely suppressed for both SjGST and hGST P1-1 DCLs,indicating that the GST active site is saturated by the ethacrynicacid and cannot influence the DCL equilibrium composition.
We completed our protein-directed DCL studies by preparing acatalytically inactive SjGST mutant. It was of interest to see whethera functionally disabled enzyme would exert the same control andselectivity on DCL composition as the wild-type enzyme. The con-served Tyr 7 active site residue is known to play a critical role inGSH conjugation for the Sj class of GSTs, stabilizing the GSH thio-late anion through H-bonding from the phenol group, withenzymes lacking this residue being catalytically inactive52. We pre-pared a Y7F mutant of SjGST, in which the crucial tyrosine
residue is replaced with phenylalanine. We observed essentiallyzero activity with this mutant in CDNB conjugation when com-pared with the wild-type SjGST. However, SjGST Y7F provedequally effective in controlling DCL composition, showing a clearpreference for the same thiophene derivative 5g as was amplifiedby the wild-type SjGST (see Supplementary Information).
Biological assay was then performed to establish whether the bestbinding compounds in the GST-directed DCLs were also the bestinhibitors of the GST enzyme. To fully explore the isozyme-specificamplification effects of the two DCLs, we separately synthesizedhydrazone conjugates 5a–5j for study. We first confirmed that theamplified ligands 5c and 5g bound to SjGST and hGST P1-1 by iso-thermal calorimetry (ITC) (see Supplementary Information). Wethen studied their inhibitory activity towards SjGST and hGSTP1-1 using the CDNB conjugation assay. The IC50 values wereslightly higher for all hydrazones against hGST P1-1 compared toSjGST (data ranging from 59 to 126 mM and 22 to 63 mM, respect-ively; see Supplementary Information). For each isozyme, the DCCamplified hydrazone was the most active; thiophene 5g had thelowest IC50 value (22 mM) among all the library members againstSjGST, and t-butylphenyl 5c had the lowest value among the fourconjugates tested against hGST P1-1 (57 mM). The DCL hydrazoneselection process has successfully extended inhibitor structure in theGST H-site, increasing potencies by sixfold for hGST P1-1 (331 to57 mM ) and by over tenfold for SjGST (279 to 22 mM) relative tothe starting anchored aldehyde 4.
Steady-state kinetic studies on the two amplified DCL com-ponents 5c (hGST P1-1) and 5g (SjGST) confirmed the expectedcompetitive inhibition profile, with both compounds binding tothe GST active sites. It was interesting to note slightly higher Kivalues for both compounds when assayed against CDNB, a substratefor the H-site of the enzyme, relative to the endogenous G-site
3gCl
NO2
N
HN
O
S
3c
ClNO2
N
HN
O
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
0
10
5
15
2025
30a
b
c
0102030405060
0
5
10
15
20
20 22 24 26 28 30 32
Time (min)
Time (min)
Time (min)
20 22 24 26 28 30 32
20 22 24 26 28 30 32
Blank
SjGST
hGST P1-1
Figure 4 | GST-templated DCLs. a, DCL hydrazone composition in the absence of any target (blank). b, When the DCL is constituted in the presence of
SjGST, the thiophene hydrazone 3g is clearly amplified. c, Changing the target protein to hGSTP1-1 produces a different distrubution, in which the
t-butylphenyl derivative 3c is amplified. Targeted DCL conditions: GST (1 equiv.), aldehyde (5mM), hydrazides (20mM) and aniline (10 mM) in NH4OAc
buffer (50 mM, pH¼ 6.2) containing 15% DMSO for 16 h.
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ligand GSH. The affinity of the two hydrazone conjugates towardsboth GST G-sites was relatively close (data ranging from 5.25 to7.19 mM), as would be expected for two compounds sharing acommon GSH-tagged nitrobenzene fragment.
To obtain some molecular insight into the selectivity of our iso-zymes towards the two hydrazone inhibitors 5c and g, we carriedout a molecular modelling study. We surveyed the available GSTstructures in the protein data bank (PDB) and retrieved those thatcontained a bound GSH-based ligand. The binding sites of thesestructures, together with the bound ligands, were aligned, andit became evident that the glutathione portions overlaid well,
being bound in very similar conformations in the G-sites (Fig. 6a).In contrast, the conjugate parts of the various ligands showed greatdiversity in their conformations within the H-site, an unsurprisingresult given the respective functions of the G- and H-sites. Detailedanalysis of the superimposed crystal structures identified the GSHconjugate of 1,2-epoxy-3-( p-nitrophenoxy)propane (EPNP) (6)bound to cGST M1-1 (PDB code 1c72)53 as the ligand that projectedfunctionality into the H-site with the most similar geometry to theenergy-minimized structure of hydrazone 5g (Fig. 6b).
Analysis of the GST–EPNP complex shows the EPNP moietyorienting towards R107 and Q165 in the H-site of the enzyme
200
0
50
100
150
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
Time (min)18 20 22 24 26 28 30
200
0
50
100
150
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
Time (min)18 20 22 24 26 28 30
200
0
50
100
150
Abs
orba
nce
(mA
U)
Time (min)
18 20
5a0
5
10
15
20
25
% A
rea
30
35
40
45Blank
Templated by SjGST
Templated by hGST P1-1
5b 5gHydrazone
5e 5j 5d 5c5h 5i+5f
22 24 26 28 30
Blank
SjGST
hGST P1-1
5a
5h
2j
5i + f5b
5g
5e 5j 5d5c
GS
NO2
4
CHO
R NHNH2
O
2a–j
GS
NO2
N
HN R
O
5a–j
AnilinepH 6.2
GST template
a
b
c
5gGS
NO2
N
HN
O
S
5cGS
NO2
N
HN
O
Figure 5 | GST-templated DCLs of GSH conjugates. a, Acyl hydrazone DCL based on GSH-conjugated aldehyde 4 (GS¼ S-linked glutathione). b, DCL
hydrazone composition in the absence of target (blank), in the presence of SjGST and in the presence of hGSTP1-1. DCL conditions: GST (1 equiv.), aldehyde
(5mM), hydrazides (20mM) and aniline (10 mM) in NH4OAc buffer (50 mM, pH¼ 6.2) containing 15% DMSO for 16 h. c, Changes in DCL component
concentration for blank, SjGST and hGST P1-1 DCLs. The error bars represent the standard deviation over three experiments.
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(Fig. 7c). The side chains of R107, F110, Q165, Q166 and F208define the pocket that confines the EPNP moiety. On this basis,we could generate a binding model for SjGST with thiophene hydra-zone 5g and for hGST P1-1 with t-butyl hydrazone 5c (Fig. 7). Theinteractions in the generated binding modes for SjGST in complexwith 5g (Fig. 7a) and for hGST P1-1 in complex with 5c (Fig. 7b)between the glutathione moiety and the proteins are identical tothose reported in previous publications54,55. We predict that thehydrazone group of 5g forms hydrogen bonds to R103 and Q204in SjGST, and equivalent interactions are observed for 5c incomplex with hGST P1-1. Residue V161 in SjGST and I161 inhGST P1-1 make hydrophobic interactions in our models withthe ligands 5c and 5g.
As expected, the sub-pockets of both isoforms accommodatingthe hydrazones are rather hydrophobic, and complement the hydro-phobic hydrazones amplified from the DCL. The thiophene hydra-zone fits easily in the SjGST binding pocket, with only minor side-chain adjustments necessary (root mean square deviation (RMSD)0.3 Å between model and crystal structure template), whereas thet-butylphenyl group would lead to a steric clash and wouldrequire some degree of induced fit in order to bind. Induced fit isalso required to accommodate this ligand in the hGST P1-1pocket, but in that case the binding mode could be stabilized byadditional lipophilic interactions of the t-butyl group with Y103,H162 and I161. It is worth noting that Chern and colleagues havereported that mutations in that region of the H-site had a greatimpact on EPNP binding as a substrate, with mutation of cGSTM1-1 Q165 to leucine (V161 in SjGST and I161 in hGST P1-1)
reducing k catEPNP by 59%, although Km showed only small
changes53. Because the amino acids in the equivalent pocket ofSjGST and hGST P1-1 are not highly conserved, these residueshave such a great influence on ligand binding that it is likely thatthese amino-acid exchanges across the isoforms are critical in deter-mining ligand selectivity.
ConclusionsWe have demonstrated that reversible synthesis of acylhydrazonescan be compatible with protein targets by using aniline as a nucleo-philic catalyst. The many advantages of this DCC tool (ready avail-ability of easily customized building blocks, good kinetic andthermodynamic properties leading to ease of analysis, good biologi-cal compatibility forming amide-like linkages) may now be realizedwith biological targets. Most importantly, the acylhydrazone DCLsare truly adaptive, allowing amplification effects to be simply anddirectly related to structures present at equilibrium.
The GST enzyme proved extremely effective as a DCL template,with two isozymes from the GST family smoothly integratingwith the small molecule assemblies and strongly amplifying thebest binding components. The selected hydrazones showedincreased inhibitory activity of over one order of magnitude fromthe starting GSH-tagged benzaldehyde 4, validating the approachin the context of protein–ligand discovery. Interestingly, a single,small DCL composed of only ten members displays isozymeselectivity according to which variant of the GST enzyme is usedas the template.
The study at hand has been deliberately confined to a smallnumber of DCL components so as to thoroughly characterize equi-librium distributions and quantify amplifications with the aniline-catalysed hydrazone method. In principle, much larger hydrazoneDCLs may be accessed to thoroughly explore chemical space, bothwithin the GST H-site and for other biological targets9,15. It maynot be possible, or even desirable, to accurately characterize theequilibrium distribution of such complex DCLs, but this will notbe necessary if one simply seeks to identify prominently amplifiedcomponents from a ligand discovery perspective.
To gain insight into isoform selectivity, we found that eachamplified molecule could be effectively docked into its respectiveGST H-site, although the fine structural features of the SjGSTversus hGST P1-1 H-site that discriminate between thiophenehydrazone 5g and t-butylphenyl hydrazone 5c are unclear at thepresent time. Structural determination of the complexes of variousGST:GS–hydrazone conjugates will be needed for a deeper under-standing of the factors that control H-site selectivity. Work in this
K45N54
Q67
R103
Q204V161
V162
V106
W41
K44 Q51
Q64
R100
N204
Y103H162
I161
W38
K49
N58
Q71
R107
N208
Q166
Q165F110
W45
a b c
Figure 7 | Molecular modelling of amplified DCL components with the GST active site. a, Model of 5g bound to SjGST. b, Model of 5c bound to hGST P1-1.
The binding pocket surfaces are shown in light blue and key amino acids as blue sticks. The ligands are represented in salmon pink, with atoms coloured by
type. Hydrogen bonds of the conjugated ligand parts are shown as yellow dotted lines. c, The EPNP–cGST M1-1 crystal structure (PDB code 1c72). The
binding pocket surface is shown in raspberry pink and key amino acids as red sticks. The ligand is represented in green, with atoms coloured by type.
Hydrogen bonds of the conjugated ligand parts are shown as yellow dotted lines.
GS
O
OHNO2
NO26 5g
GS
N
HN
O
S
a b
Figure 6 | GST ligands. a, Superposition of a selection of GST ligands from
the PDB. b, Conformation of the GST-bound EPNP ligand 6 as found in the
crystal structure of cGST M1-1 (PDB code 1c72, green carbon atoms), relative
to the energy-minimized structure of compound 5g (pink carbon atoms).
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area, together with applications of acylhydrazone DCC to other bio-logical targets, is the subject of our current research.
MethodsAniline catalysis of reversible hydrazone formation. The ten hydrazides 2a–j(10 × 5 ml, 10 mM, DMSO), aldehyde 1 (2 ml, 10 mM, DMSO) and aniline (10 ml,1 M, DMSO) were added to a mixture of DMSO (93 ml) and ammonium acetatebuffer (845 ml, 50 mM, pH 6.2). The DCL was allowed to stand at room temperaturewith occasional shaking, and was monitored periodically by HPLC to establish theblank composition until the relative populations of the hydrazones became constant.The pH of all samples was raised to 8 by the addition of NaOH (15 ml, 1 M,aqueous). LC-MS verified that each of the expected hydrazones was present in theDCL (HPLC conditions: column, Luna 5 m C18(2), 30 mm × 4.6 mm, and Luna 5 m
C18(2), 50 mm × 4.6 mm, in sequence; flow rate, 1 ml min21; wavelength, 254 nm;temperature, 23 8C; gradient, H2O/MeCN (0.01% TFA) from 95% to 80% over6 min, then to 45% over 30 min, and eventually to 5% over 5 min) (Fig. 2d). TheDCL was then re-synthesized in the absence of aniline, and the HPLC traces atdifferent time intervals were compared (Fig. 2c).
Templated DCL aldehyde 1. SjGST (111 ml, 180 mM, in potassium phosphatebuffer 0.1 M, pH 6.8), the ten hydrazides 2a–j (10 × 5 ml, 10 mM, DMSO), aldehyde1 (2 ml, 10 mM, DMSO) and aniline (10 ml, 1 M, DMSO) were added to a mixture ofDMSO (93 ml) and ammonium acetate buffer (734 ml, 50 mM, pH 6.2). The DCLwas allowed to stand at room temperature, with occasional shaking, for 12 h. The pHof the sample was raised to 8 by the addition of NaOH (15 ml, 1 M, aqueous), andthe protein was removed by ultrafiltration using a 10,000 MWCO filter (Vivaspin).HPLC analysis was performed and the traces were compared with the blankcomposition (HPLC conditions: column, Luna 5 m C18(2), 30 mm × 4.6 mm, andLuna 5 m C18(2), 50 mm × 4.6 mm, in sequence; flow rate, 1 ml min21; wavelength,254 nm; temperature, 23 8C; gradient H2O/MeCN (0.01% TFA) from 95% to 80%over 6 min, then to 45% over 30 min, and eventually to 5% over 5 min).
DCL composition was identical, regardless of whether the SjGST was presentfrom the beginning or added after pre-equilibration, but equilibration took morethan 24 h in the latter case.
For the hGST P1-1 templated library, the ten hydrazides 2a–j (10 × 5 ml, 10 mM,DMSO), aldehyde 1 (2 ml, 10 mM, DMSO), aniline (10 ml, 1 M, DMSO) and hGSTP1-1 (100 ml, 200 mM, in potassium phosphate buffer 0.1 M, pH 6.8) were added to amixture of DMSO (93 ml) and ammonium acetate buffer (734 ml, 50 mM, pH 6.2).After equilibration for 12 h, the DCL was analysed using HPLC. Control experimentswere performed using the same equivalents of BSA in place of GST.
Conjugate DCLs. To establish the blank DCL composition, the ten hydrazides 2a–j(10 × 5 ml, 10 mM, DMSO), aldehyde 5 (5 ml, 10 mM, aqueous) and aniline (10 ml,1 M, DMSO) were added to a mixture of DMSO (96 ml) and ammonium acetatebuffer (839 ml, 50 mM, pH 6.2). The DCL was allowed to stand at room temperature,with occasional shaking, and was monitored periodically by HPLC to establish theblank composition until the relative populations of the hydrazones became constant.The pH of all the samples was increased to 8 by the addition of NaOH (15 ml, 1 M,aqueous). LC-MS verified that each of the expected hydrazones was present in theDCL (Fig. 5) (HPLC conditions: column, Luna 5 m C18(2), 50 mm × 4.6 mm, andLuna 5 m C18(2), 250 mm × 4.6 mm, in sequence; flow rate, 1 ml min21;wavelength, 254 nm; temperature, 23 8C; gradient H2O/MeCN (0.01% TFA) from95% to 5% over 40 min).
For re-synthesizing the DCL in the presence of the protein SjGST (278 ml,180 mM, in potassium phosphate buffer 0.1 M, pH 6.8), the ten hydrazides 2a–j(10 × 5 ml, 10 mM, DMSO), aldehyde 5 (5 ml, 10 mM, DMSO) and aniline (10 ml,1 M, DMSO) were added to a mixture of DMSO (96 ml) and ammonium acetatebuffer (561 ml, 50 mM, pH 6.2). The DCL templated by hGST P1-1 was synthesizedby adding the ten hydrazides 2a–j (10 × 5 ml, 10 mM, DMSO), aldehyde 5 (5 ml,10 mM, DMSO), aniline (10 ml, 1 M, DMSO) and hGST P1-1 (250 ml, 200 mM, inpotassium phosphate buffer 0.1 M, pH 6.8) to a mixture of DMSO (96 ml) andammonium acetate buffer (589 ml, 50 mM, pH 6.2). The DCLs were allowed to standat room temperature for 12 h, after which the pH was raised to 8 by the addition ofNaOH (15 ml, 1 M). The protein was filtered off using a centrifuge filter of MWCO10,000 followed by analysis of the filtrate by HPLC using conditions similar to thoselisted above.
Molecular modelling. To establish ligand alignment, the superposition of GSTligands was carried out using Relibaseþ 3.0.0 (ref. 56). A search was first performedto find binding sites that share a sequence identity between 40 and 100% with thetarget GST crystal structure 1m9a. The resulting 38 structures with bound ligandwere superimposed by using binding site residues only. Finally, the ligands from thesuperimposed structures were extracted and visually analysed.
To carry out a binding mode prediction with Moloc57, the SjGST crystalstructure (PDB code 1m9a SjGST – S-hexyl–GSH complex) and the hGSTP1-1–GSH complex crystal structure (PDB code 6gss)54 were used as startingconformations for binding mode generation. The glutathione groups of thesynthesized ligands were mapped onto the glutathione groups of the ligands boundto the crystal structures. The hydrophobic hydrazone groups of the synthesizedligands were oriented towards the cavity, lying at the end of the S-hexyl site, as
observed for the EPNP ligand bound to cGSTM1-1 (PDB code 1c72). In the nextstep, the protein in complex with the modelled ligand was minimized, consideringthe ligand as fully flexible. For the protein all residues were kept rigid, except for theamino acids that define the pocket at the end of the S-hexyl site (R103, V106, V161,V162, Q204 for SjGST and R100, Y103, I161, H162, N204 for hGST P1-1).
Received 7 December 2009; accepted 30 March 2010;published online 16 May 2010
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AcknowledgementsThe authors would like to thank EastChem for the award of a studentship to V.T.B. and theMarie Curie Early Stage Training Network (Syn4chembio) and School of Chemistry atEdinburgh for awarding a studentship to A.M.C. R.B. is supported by an EC SeventhFramework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no. 223461. M.F.G. is anEngineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Leadership Fellow. Theauthors thank A. Cooper (University of Glasgow) for ITC measurements and helpfuldiscussions. N. Petitjean is thanked for the synthesis of hydrazone–GSH conjugates.
Author contributionsV.T.B., A.M.C., D.J.C. and M.F.G. conceived and designed the experiments, V.T.B. andA.M.C. performed the experiments, and T.L., R.B. and A.M.C. carried out molecularmodelling. All authors discussed the results and co-wrote the manuscript.
Additional informationThe authors declare no competing financial interests. Supplementary information andchemical compound information accompany this paper at www.nature.com/naturechemistry. Reprints and permission information is available online at http://npg.nature.com/reprintsandpermissions/. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressedto D.J.C. and M.F.G.
ARTICLES NATURE CHEMISTRY DOI: 10.1038/NCHEM.658
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Nitrilotriacetic Acid-Derivatized Quantum Dots for Simple Purification andSite-Selective Fluorescent Labeling of Active Proteins in a Single Step
Manish Gupta, Anne Caniard, Angeles Touceda-Varela, Dominic J. Campopiano, and Juan C. Mareque-Rivas*Received July 3, 2008; Revised Manuscript Received August 16, 2008
We demonstrate that QDs coated with nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) bound to Ni2+ can be used to reversibly andselectively bind, purify, and fluorescently label His6-tagged (N-terminal) glutathione S-transferase (GST) in onestep with retention of enzymatic activity. We find binding to be less effective in the absence of the His6-tag orNi2+ ions.
Colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals (quantum dots, QDs)have emerged as powerful fluorescent probes for biologicalimaging applications (1-5). QDs have several advantages oversmall organic dyes and fluorescent proteins such as size-tuneablephotoluminescence, wide excitation-narrow emission proper-ties, improved brightness, and high resistance to photobleachingand degradation. To conjugate QDs to biomolecules, the QDsurface is derivatized in such a way as to allow the attachmentof the biomolecule through a covalent bond, electrostatic, orhydrophobic interactions. A typical biomolecule contains manyresidues capable of forming covalent and noncovalent linkageswith the QD. The ability to control the site of attachment isimportant to ensure that the biomolecule bound to the QD isstill active. Site-specific noncovalent binding of QDs to bio-molecules has been achieved by exploiting carbohydrate-lectinand streptavidin-biotin interactions (6, 7).
A common approach to facilitate protein purification involvesthe use of genetically encoded oligohistidine (Hisn) tags (8-10).Since Hisn-tags are recognized by nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA)complexes of nickel(II) (Scheme 1), purification of these proteinsis achieved by passing the protein mixture through chromatog-raphy columns containing Ni-NTA resins (11-13). Given thewidespread use of Hisn-tags and the fact that they can beintroduced into regions of peptides where they do not disturbprotein structure and function such as at the termini or in loops,they provide a convenient way to achieve site-specific bindingfor many applications (14-18). Hence, the fluorescent labelingof specific proteins by encoding Hisn-tags on them coupled tothe recognition of these tags by Ni-NTA has become popular.Initially, this was done using organic dye-NTA conjugates(19, 20), but very recently it has been extended to QDs. Thus,during the final stages of preparation of this manuscript the firststudy showing that Ni-NTA-containing QDs that can be appliedto imaging His6-tagged proteins in live cells has appeared (21).This is interesting because it has been shown that Hisn-tags canalso bind with very high affinity (Kd ≈ 1 nM) to QDs withcarboxylic acid functionalities requiring fewer synthetic stepsand cheaper reagents (22). In another study, however, it wasreported that QDs with carboxylic acids presented at the surfacebind His-tagged proteins only in the presence of Ni2+ cations(23). Thus, it is interesting to investigate the advantages,disadvantages and applicability of each of these functionalitiesfor the formation of QD-protein conjugates.
Here, we investigate binding of His6-tagged and untaggedGST as model protein to CdSe-ZnS core-shell nanoparticleswith carboxylates, NTA, and Ni2+-bound NTA at the surface.
QDs-GST conjugates are interesting because GSTs catalyzethe nucleophilic addition of GSH to the electrophilic center ofa range of nonpolar substrates as a way of detoxifying a widerange of harmful endogenous and xenobiotic compounds (24),and in drug resistance mechanisms (25). Since GST activityrequires not only the formation of a dimeric structure (i.e.,protein-protein interactions) but also binding of both GSH andan acceptor substrate (i.e., protein-substrate interactions), it isa good enzyme to investigate the effect of specific andnonspecific binding of QDs on enzymatic activity. We reportthat the combination of His6-tagged GST with CdSe-ZnScore-shell nanoparticles coated with Ni2+-bound NTA givesthe best results. The resulting QD-protein conjugate is stronglyfluorescent and readily purified by filtration or ultracentrifuga-tion, which should enable widespread use of these QDs as a“two-in-one” purification-fluorescence labeling tool. Moreover,the QD binds the His6-tagged GST with little disruption of itsenzymatic activity, whereas QD binding is weaker and disruptsenzymatic activity when GST lacks a His-tag or when Ni2+ isunavailable. This is a significant result in that it shows that byusing this simple construct protein purification, fluorescenttagging, and precise positioning of the fluorescent probe topreserve structural/functional properties are all accomplishedin a single, inexpensive step. It shows also that QDs presentingNi-NTA at the surface provide a good alternative to site-specifically binding His-tagged proteins if, like in this case, theeasier-to-make QDs with carboxylic acids at the surface fail todo so (Vide infra).
The QDs decorated with NTA were easily prepared from thereaction of CdSe-ZnS core-shell dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA)-* Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected].
Scheme 1a
a (A) Reversible binding between a His-tagged protein and Ni(NTA).(B) Synthesis of the QD functionalized with NTA.
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capped QDs (26) with commercially available N,N-bis(car-boxymethyl)-L-lysine hydrate using EDC and N-hydroxysuc-cinimide as coupling agents in phosphate buffer solution(Scheme 1). The product is purified by filtration with a Nanosep100K centrifugal device (Pall Corporation). The compositionof the QDs was examined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy(XPS). The XPS spectra showed the main diagnostic peaks ofthe product QDs: a 2s peak at 400.1 eV due to N, and 2p3 and2p1 peaks at 857.1 and 874.1 eV, respectively, due to Ni2+
(Supporting Information).The photoluminescence intensity of the Ni-NTA-capped QD
is ca. 85% that of the NTA-capped QD (Figure 1). This isimportant because the paramagnetic Ni2+ was found to stronglyquench the photoluminescence of some organic dyes, limitingtheir applications (19).
We selected GST from the helminth worm Schistosomajaponica (SjGST, 26 kDa monomer) as our target enzymebecause it is amenable to recombinant overexpression in E. colias a His6-tagged construct and has been well-characterized (9).It is important to note that the His6-tag was genetically fused atthe N-terminus. The noncovalent attachment of His6-tagged anduntagged GST to the QD surface before and after derivatizationwith Ni-NTA was analyzed by SDS-PAGE. A solution of theQD or PBS (as control) was incubated with the correspondingenzyme for 2 h and passed through a Nanosep 300K centrifugaldevice. The retenate was redissolved in PBS buffer, and bothretenate and filtrate were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. In theabsence of the QD, His6-tagged and untagged GST were foundonly in the filtrate. Several reports have shown that the DHLA-coated CdSe-ZnS core-shell QDs are capable of binding His-tagged proteins by coordination to Zn2+ ions at the nanocrystalsurface (22, 26-28). Our SDS-PAGE studies, however, did notfind protein in the retenate (Figure 2). Lack of binding couldbe due to steric hindrance at the N-terminus location of the His6-tag preventing access to the Zn2+ atoms of the nanoparticle. Itis also possible that the different synthetic procedures used toprepare QDs lead to subtle changes at the QD surface whichaffect binding of biomolecules. However, it is worth noting thatit is not rare for His-tagged proteins to exhibit differentproperties depending on whether the His-tag is at the N- orC-terminus, and that in the studies reporting direct His-tagbinding to carboxylate-coated QDs the His-tag was located atthe C-terminus (22, 26-28). In contrast, using the sameexperimental conditions the Ni-NTA-capped QDs immobilizedboth enzymes. Moreover, we found more His6-tagged thanuntagged GST in the retenate. Binding was also investigated inthe presence of high salt concentrations. His6-GST binding toNi-NTA-capped QDs was not affected by 1 M NaCl. In contrast,untagged GST did not bind to the QDs under these conditions,
which suggests it is predominantly electrostatic. Thus, high saltconcentrations can be used to avoid binding of untagged proteinswhile ensuring binding of the desired His6-tagged target. Theenzyme was easily released from the QD surface upon additionof 0.5 M imidazole, which competes for the Ni2+ binding sites.Thus, decorating the surface of the QD with Ni2+ complexesof NTA seems a good approach for noncovalent site-specificfluorescent labeling of proteins, which can be used for instanceif carboxylate-functionalized QDs lacking Ni2+ ions fail.Potential advantages of attaching Ni-NTA units to QDs couldbe stronger interactions with the His-tag (Kd ≈ 10-13 M) (18)and less sensitivity to steric hindrance and surface propertiesby being further away from the nanocrystal surface.
Recently, the value of magnetic nanoparticles as affinityprobes to selectively trap and separate His-tagged proteins fromcell lysates has been elegantly demonstrated (29-32). Theprotein purification efficiency of the Ni-NTA-capped QDs wasinvestigated by incubating cell lysates containing His6-taggedGST for 2 h. Remarkably, pure fluorescently labeled GST wasobtained simply by ultracentrifugaton of this mixture (Figure3). Thus, by using the Ni-NTA-capped QDs it is possible topurify and fluorescently label His-tagged proteins in a singlestep. Current methods for efficiently purifying and fluorescentlylabeling His-tagged proteins need various labor-intensive andexpensive steps, such as conjugation of NTA derivatives onsupport materials or the preparation of suitable magneticnanoparticles for purification purposes, followed by the attach-ment of fluorescent tags. Another construct suitable for one-step protein purification and site-specific labeling was recentlydeveloped and involves organic fluorophore-doped Ni-NTA-modified silica nanoparticles (33).
In order to obtain information about the effect of QD bindingon the catalytic activity of GST, we have used 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) as substrate. The GST-catalyzed reac-tion of GSH with CDNB produces a dinitrophenyl thioether
Figure 1. Photoluminescence spectra for CdSe-ZnS core-shell QDscoated with DHLA-NTA and DHLA-Ni(NTA) (spectra were acquiredin 20 mM PBS pH 6.7, excitation at 350 nm; T ) 293 K). The integratedemission decreases 15% upon Ni2+ addition.
Figure 2. SDS-PAGE of the retenate (R) and filtrate (F) afterultrafiltration through a Nanosep 300K filter of His6-GST (a), untaggedGST (b), His6-GST incubated with QD (c), and untagged GST incubatedwith QD (d). In each case, the enzyme and QD concentrations were16.5 µM and 9.0 µM, respectively.
Figure 3. (A) SDS-PAGE studies of the cell lysate containing His6-tagged GST (lane 2) and proteins released from the Ni-NTA-coatedQDs treated with PBS containing 0.5 M imidazole (lane 3) andsupernatant (lane 4) after ultracentrifugation. Lane 1 is the molecularweight marker. (B) Images of the cell lysate after ultracentrifugationand of the pure QD-bound His6-tagged GST.
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which can be conveniently detected spectrophotometrically at340 nm (34). His6-tagged GST and untagged GST wereincubated with the same concentration of Ni-NTA-capped QD.We have found that His6-tagged GST retains its activity afterbinding to the QD, whereas the untagged GST loses activity(Figure 4). We suggest that the ability of the His6-tag to controlthe position of the Ni-NTA-capped QD relative to the GSTactive site is responsible for preserving the activity of theenzyme. The X-ray crystal structure of SjGST (35) shows thatthe N terminus, which is where the His6 tag was placed, is ca.25 Å away from the essential catalytic residue Tyr7 (Figure 4).We have examined the distribution of positively and negativelycharged residues and found that there are positive and negativeregions close to the active site. These are sites where in theabsence of the His6 tag nonspecific electrostatic binding couldoccur, disrupting the enzyme activity. By comparing the activityof the enzyme which did not bind to the QD with that of theenzyme before incubation with QD, we estimated the proteinbinding capacity and number of His6-GST molecules im-mobilized on each QD (∼16). This surface coverage correlateswell with that found for QDs and proteins of similar size (26, 27).
In summary, we have shown that Ni-NTA-coated QDsprovide a straightforward method to, in one step, purify andfluorescently reversibly label proteins. By using these QDs, wehave selectively purified and labeled an N-terminal His6-taggedGST, which was not possible using QDs with carboxylates atthe surface. Moreover, we have found that Ni2+ provides adocking site which helps to precisely orient the fluorescentnanoparticle on the protein surface and that, as a result, GSTretained its activity. The use of His-tags has been broadlyadopted in the molecular biology and biochemistry communities,and therefore this specific conjugation strategy should enablewidespread use of these QDs for a broad range of biologicalapplications.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
We are grateful to EaStCHEM for a PhD studentship toM.G. A.T.V. acknowledges the Xunta de Galicia (Spain) for apostdoctoral fellowship. A.C. is funded by a Marie Curie Fellow-ship. We acknowledge support from the EPSRC to purchase theXPS. We would like to thank Dr. Wuzong Zhou and Ross Blackleyat EaStCHEM-St. Andrews for the HRTEM studies.
Supporting Information Available: Details on experimentalprocedures and characterization data. This material is availablefree of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
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